A list of tunes
At the top of the page is a little chunk of text describing the list you're looking at. Then there is more text reminding you about any filters you may have set using the Tune Search form, and links to apply these filters (show only the tunes from the original list that match the filtering) or remove them (show all the tunes from the original list). This latter doesn't delete the filters, you can re-apply them whenever you want.
You can download this list of tunes in the form of an ABC file.
Then there's a list that displays the title of each listed tune, and a few other things about it. It's divided up into pages, with controls at top and bottom to move around among them. The number of tunes per page is configurable, but only up to a 'hard-wired' limit. This is partly for reasons of speed - building & displaying these lists is slower than I'm really pleased with - but also because pouring out the whole of a big list on each request is expensive on bandwidth, which I pay for. This is unimportant while it's only seeing limited 'testing' use, as now, but I have no idea what the numbers will look like when it's in full use, I'll review this later when I can see how it's going.
Each tune has a View link to display it. This is separated from the tune's data fields by a 'separator' character, which is either a hyphen ( - ) or an asterisk ( * ). The former indicates that the tune is publicly viewable, the latter says that it's one of your private tunes (you'll only see these if you're logged in, of course). If you are logged in, the title to each tune will be a link to an editor, and on the right-hand side of the listing there will be a 'delete' link that will remove that tune from the database.
The way in which titles are sorted may be a little unexpected - if a title contains a capital letter or a numeral, that will be taken as the first character for sorting purposes. The idea of this is that you can write titles with the little words at the beginning in lowercase and capitalise the first important word, thus avoiding lists where a third of the tunes are grouped under 'an' and the rest will be found under 'the'.