Tabs
Best Practices
Tabs are useful for elaborating on an idea that has set structures or categories of sub-information, particularly, if you have a collection of pieces of content that all have the same set structures. For example, laying out a series of studies that each has a hypothesis, a method, and findings. Tabs are especially effective when the information presented in the first tab is built on in the second; the second built on in the first, and so on (as in the example of a study's hypothesis, method, and findings).
To copy Tabs onto a different page please make sure the page is in 'Edit HTML' mode.
Tabs: Group of 2
Tabs: Horizontal: start copy
Horizontal Tab 1 of 2 content
Horizontal Tab 2 of 2 content
Tabs: Horizontal: end copy
Tabs: Group of 3
Tabs: Horizontal: start copy
Horizontal Tab 1 of 3 content
Horizontal Tab 2 of 3 content
Horizontal Tab 3 of 3 content
Tabs: Horizontal: end copy
Tabs: Group of 4
Tabs: Horizontal: start copy
Horizontal Tab 1 of 4 content
Horizontal Tab 2 of 4 content
Horizontal Tab 3 of 4 content
Horizontal Tab 4 of 4 content
Tabs: Horizontal: end copy