The attribute
$node.path_array or $node.path contains the info of all the parent nodes down to the current node. For example, {$node.path[0].name} will show "Root Folder", {$node.path[1].name} will probably be "News" (if your News object is one level under Root Folder).
You can use {$node|attribute(show)} in the template, then you will see the values of $node.path_array or $node.path.
Thanks Claire! I'm sure this is the solution. As you say {$node.path[0].name} shows the root folders name, and {$node.path[1].name} my level "MySite".
However {$node.path[2].name} doesn't return "News", "Sports" and so on. No output, just a blank line. weird.. Trying to figure out why. The names exist so I can't understand why [2] doesn't return "News" as in my structure / Root Folder / MySite / News..
Ok, I found this error in debug:
---------------------------------- Error: eZTemplate @
design/mysite/override/templates/pagelayout_mysite.tpl:330[24] Jul 17 2003 10:50:33
No such attribute for array(2): 3 Choose one of following: 0, 1
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