Nodes and links can be considered as design objects. Properties (semantics) can be associated with these design objects in order to introduce coherence in a hypertext document.
The content part contains design objects that carry information. They are content nodes that contain information and content links that connect content nodes based on semantic relationships. Content nodes can be either atomic or composite in nature. Content links can be typed specifying the exact nature of the semantic relationship. They can be classified into three types:
This classification of links is similar to the more elaborate classification of nodes and links in the hypertext framework developed by Rao and Turoff. According to Thuring et al., the author creating a hypertext document can initially create a Level Two link to show a general relationship between content nodes. As the author becomes more clear about the relationship between two nodes, the link labels can be changed to Level Three. Thus, "the levels of link label hierarchy support a continuous refinement of the links depending on author's current state of knowledge." [Thuring et al., 1991].
While creating the content part, the following design rules can be applied: