Grouping Rows in Structured Content

You can group structured content pages by up to 3 different columns. The page uses values in the selected column to determine how to present the content. Row grouping works with both the details and the thumbnails views.

For example, if your page has columns that include City, State, and Country, you could define grouping by Country, then by State, then by City.

If the page has a single root node, the grouping only applies to first level children of that root node. If the page has multiple root nodes, the grouping applies to root nodes only and not any child levels.


Before you begin: Open a structured content page that supports row grouping.
  1. Click on the page toolbar.

    Some pages have row grouping defaults selected. If so, when you open the page, the row grouping toolbar already shows.

    The page adds the Group By toolbar beneath the page toolbar.

  2. From each list, select the column to use for grouping the rows. Not all columns can be used for grouping rows.

    If a column is in a group, the group header follows the column name in parentheses. This format is especially helpful when the page includes more than 1 column with the same name.

  3. Click Apply.

    The number in parentheses after the row group title shows how many rows have that value.

    You can use the sort, filter, and export tools on the grouped rows.

  4. Click or the X in the toolbar to hide the toolbar.

    If you edit a structured content page that has grouped rows, and your edit would result in that row moving to a different group, the row is not moved to that group until you click Apply for the page to accept your edits.

  5. You can use the + and - symbols to expand or collapse the rows, and if you click a check box for a grouped row label, all items within that group are selected.
  6. To remove row grouping from a page, follow these steps:
    1. Click to show the toolbar.
    2. Click Reset.
    3. Click to hide the toolbar.
    The drop-down fields are cleared and the page is reformatted to its original structure.