Widget:TestTabs: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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<style> | |||
.brizzle { | |||
background-color: linen; | |||
} | |||
</style> | |||
<details open class="brizzle"> | <details open class="brizzle"> | ||
<summary class="drizzle"> | <summary class="drizzle"> |
Version vom 3. Januar 2024, 11:55 Uhr
<style> .brizzle { background-color: linen; } </style> <details open class="brizzle">
<summary class="drizzle"> How do you create an accordion? </summary>
Easy! As long as you don't have to support IE11 or older browsers you could use<details>
and<summary>
natively.
</details> <details> <summary> What if I have to support IE11 or older browsers? </summary>
No worries. The fallback for these elements is quite good. They will display as open. You won't get the open/close mechanism, but you won't lose any content either.
</details> <details> <summary> What type of content can I have inside one of these? </summary>
Almost anything you'd like. The <details>
element allows all <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/HTML/Content_categories#flow_content" target="_blank">flow content</a>, which is basically everything.
</details> <details> <summary> How does it work? </summary>
The<details>
element encapsulates the<summary>
element. The<summary>
becomes the 'label' for the<details>
and acts like a button. When clicked, the attributeopen
is added to the<details>
element, making it display. You can therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd like.
</details>