As already demonstrated Sandpoints is developed and accessible as a web site. On top of that, Sandpoints, at any given moment, allows for printing all of its content into a well designed PDF publication. The PDF publication prints out _Table of Contents_ with precise pagination numbers for every section and subsection.
That's one of the reasons why Sandpoints introduces triadic tiers structure for its content. The header of this page, once rendered against Sandpoints theme, says:
This is not a ship. Ship has decks. Decks has cabins. This is a poetic way to introduce one of the ways to develop Sandpoints. You launch **Sandpoints ship**. Your ship has decks. Decks has cabins. The Table of Contents in Sandpoints' PDF will always know what's the page number of any of your decks or cabins.
Sandpoints accepts [Markdown](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown). A plain text formatting syntax created by Aaron Swartz and John Gruber in 2004. It was designed with an idea that formatting could stay plain text, human readable, but with enough of intented instructions and structure from the author that any post-processing tools of interpratation can make it look good.
> Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
As one can see it already looks well structured but after I submit it in a second this text will get a look and feel of a Sandpoints default theme. Let's see!