You can enable the user to always see the menu while scrolling. Set the <Menu Drifts on Scroll> property to "yes".
The user may be able to move the menu by dragging it from its Title. Set the <Movable> property to "yes".
The menu can look like a ladder. Use a non-zero value at the <Distance Between Items> property.
You can have no Title in the Main Menu and Submenus. Set the <Title Contains> to "Do not show Title".
The menu can look like a typical horizontal, pull-down, Windows menu. Choose "Horizontal Menubar" at the <Main Menu Type> property.
Backgrounds are layered. Set a BG property to blank and the next background will appear, in the following order: <Item BG Image>, <Item BG Color>, <Submenu BG Image>, <Submenu BG Color>, web page background.
You can display your actual web page in the menu background. Set all background properties to "no image" and "transparent".
The submenus may open smoothly rather than instantly. Choose "Unfolding" in the <Submenu Opens - How> property.
The Submenus Title can show only an image if you wish so. Set an image at the <Title Image> property and set the <Title Contains> to "Image Only".
You can properly align an image with its associated text. Use the <Item Image Alignment> or <Title Image Alignment> properties.
Your menu items can look like buttons. Use different <Item Border ...> values for different item states; eg: use "outset" in Normal state and "inset" in the Mouse Over state.
You can highlight the selected menu item. Change the <BG Color> and <Border> properties in the Mouse Over and Mouse Click states.
You can eliminate height dissimilarities within a Vertical submenu. Use the <Uniform Item Heights> property to apply the largest item height to all submenu items.
You can eliminate width dissimilarities within a Horizontal submenu. Use the <Uniform Item Widths> property to apply the largest item width to all the submenu items.
You can use an element's design to "paint" other similar elements. Design an element exactly the way you like it, PICK its style and APPLY it to similar elements.
You can use pre-defined Styles. Open the Style Gallery, choose a style and apply it to the selected element or to the entire menu.
You can fully customize your menu items in three different mouse states. On Normal, when mouse is away, on Mouse Over, when mouse points on the item and on Mouse Click, when the user clicks on the item.
You can have "empty" submenus. Add no items to a submenu and the submenu will only show its Title; with its Text and/or its Image.
You can put an image to emphasize the existence of a submenu linked to an item. Use the <Has Submenu Image> property.
Items can show comments on the status bar when the mouse points on them. Specify the comments at the <Statusbar Text> property.
Items can open their URLs in any frame on the Web page. Use the Target Frame property; type the frame name or new to open the URL in a new window or top to open it in the same window.
Each new element (submenu or item) inherits the style of its previous element.
You can use HTML tags in the <Item Name> property; eg: "<b>More</b> Options"
You can improve the menu building speed by using the "Tools-> Compile Properties: Optimization" option.
A menu can have both horizontal AND vertical submenus at any possible combination.
You can use the 'Javascript Command' property to execute a Javascript call on the page.
Menus can be centered at any chosen edge; eg. use "Top Edge - Horizontally Centered" to center the menu at the top of the page.
You can position menus relative to page elements using the <span> tags.
You can specify more than one menus to appear on one page.
When you are using frames you can specify your submenus to open up on a different frame than your main menu.
You can now run Javascript commands on Mouseover and Mouseout!
AllWebMenus has full Frontpage Shared borders support.