Page A is a frameset.  It contains two frames.

The content for the first frame is defined by page B.
The content for the second frame is defined by page C.

Page A's template will have two Frame components.
The first Frame component will be configured to display 
page B.  The second, page C.

That's all there is to it.

At runtime, the Frame component uses the page name to 
build a URL invoking the page service for the specified 
page (the same URL that would be generated by a PageLink 
component).  This is applied as the src attribute of the 
<frame> tag.

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> Thanks Geoff.  While I like the example, it (as you say) doesn't work in
> Netscape (or Opera).  I've trailed off down this path before, attempting to
> find non-framed, cross-browser, scrolling solutions and haven't discovered
> anything that does the job as reliably as frames.  Maybe there's a
> cross-browser solution that works; if so, I have yet to find it.  In the
> meantime, given the broad support and ease of implementation frames normally
> enjoy, I'd prefer to use them.  Tapestry offers a Frame component, but so
> far I'm not getting how to set a target frame for a Tapestry page.  Mental
> block?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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