The Silva management area has two workspaces in which Authors, Editors and Chief Editors work.
The Content management area has five screens: contents, preview, properties, access and publish. Each screen provides a cascading overview, showing both the item and its underlying items’ characteristics (except the preview screen, which only shows the preview at that level).
The Authoring or document area can have up to five screens: edit, preview, properties, access, and publish. Each screen provides a different view of the item. Sometimes there are less than five screens, depending on what sort of content it is.
The functions of the screens in the two workspaces correspond. For instance in the publish screen of a Document, Editors can publish the item. Editors can also publish it in the publish screen of its Folder. The difference is that when you’re in a publish screen of a document, all modifications only affect that item. When you’re in a Folder you can perform bulk operations on multiple objects, such as publishing all items inside a publication in one go. (Fig. 1.)

Fig. 1. Silva building blocks on the left, with their corresponding screens. The screens are like veins running through the content tree.
A Silva Publication usually has multiple levels of Folders and subfolders. Since each level has a corresponding set of screens, a matrix of locations develops. Navigation through this grid is possible in three directions.
Fig. 2. Top navigation, with the current screen highlighted.
Fig. 3. From the Preview screen of a document deep in the content tree, the matrix navigation allows you reach a multitude of locations in one click.
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