There are two ways to link from page to page: menus & links. In most web design (whether you use a wysiwyg editor or not), it's easier to link text or images to another web page than it is to set up a menu. As with everything else, Mambo is the opposite. Menus are pretty easy -- linking, not so much.
Menus
Menus are modules (for more about modules, see tips #4 or #8 ). A few menus come with your Mambo installation (main, top, other, and more). Since they are modules, you can place them in positions in your template. One thing to remember about menus is that you can't create a link until you've created content.
You can add menu items (links) from the content, or from the menu manager. From a content item (Content -> Content Managers -> All Content Items [or choose your category], then click on the content item to edit), there is a tab on the right called Link to Menu. It will let you choose any or all of the menus, and tell it what words you want to appear in the menu. I think this is the easiest way to link menus to content you have created.
You can add or remove links from a menu (Menu -> [choose menu]). Remove links by trashing them (don't worry, it doesn't delete your content, just the link). Add links with the "new" button on the toolbar. It will give you a number of choices that determine both what type of content you are linking to and how you want that content to appear.
New Menu Items: How - What
The list looks like this: Blog - Content Category Blog - Content Section Link - Contact Item etc. The first word tells how it will appear on the page. A blog page contains multiple pieces of content, but only shows the "intro" text of each item (with a link to see the full item on another page). A link will go directly to whatever item you specify. A table contains multiple pieces of content in table format. A separator doesn't link to anything.
The second word tells what will appear on the page. Content or Section, outside url or newsfeed, contact item or static content or newsfeed. (So many options!)
There are two ways to link from page to page: menus & links. In most web design (whether you use a wysiwyg editor or not), it's easier to link text or images to another web page than it is to set up a menu. As with everything else, Mambo is the opposite. Menus are pretty easy -- linking, not so much.
Before you make too many menus, remember that menus are modules, and that Mambo already has a lot of built-in modules. If you want to build a menu for news items, for example, then stop! It's already done. The "Latest News" module displays links to the most recent n content items in your News category. And you don't have to do anything but put that module in one of the positions in your template (tips #3 and #4).
Linking
If you want to link text or images in content to another page in your site, the first thing to do is to get one of the "nice url" components. Do a search for Mambo extensions or ask on the forum for tips about up-to-date 3rd party SEF components. Note, however, that search engines don't have any problems with the standard Mambo URL, so there is no real benefit to be gained by changing the URL's UNLESS you find a component that gives you human-friendly URL's.
Now that you have "nice" urls, you will have to copy and paste. Open your browser and go to the page on your site you would like to link to. Highlight and copy the url. Now go to your Mambo admin, and go to the content you want to link from (Content -> All Content Items [or choose category], and edit the content item). Highlight the text or image you want to link, and click the "link" button in the editor. Paste the url in the popup box, and voila, your text is linked. (Hey, let me know if there is an easier way to do this....) You should be able to actually make a site now. Yay!! But wait - there's more....
Next tip: Blogs - Your Mambo Frontpage