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Version: 2.0.0-alpha.75

Tabs

To show tabbed content within Markdown files, you can fall back on MDX. Docusaurus provides <Tabs> components out-of-the-box.

import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs';
import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
<Tabs
defaultValue="apple"
values={[
{label: 'Apple', value: 'apple'},
{label: 'Orange', value: 'orange'},
{label: 'Banana', value: 'banana'},
]}>
<TabItem value="apple">This is an apple 🍎</TabItem>
<TabItem value="orange">This is an orange 🍊</TabItem>
<TabItem value="banana">This is a banana 🍌</TabItem>
</Tabs>;

And you will get the following:

This is an apple 🍎
info

By default, tabs are rendered eagerly, but it is possible to load them lazily by passing the lazy prop to the Tabs component.

Syncing tab choices#

You may want choices of the same kind of tabs to sync with each other. For example, you might want to provide different instructions for users on Windows vs users on macOS, and you want to changing all OS-specific instructions tabs in one click. To achieve that, you can give all related tabs the same groupId prop. Note that doing this will persist the choice in localStorage and all <Tab> instances with the same groupId will update automatically when the value of one of them is changed. Note that groupID are globally-namespaced.

<Tabs
groupId="operating-systems"
defaultValue="win"
values={[
{label: 'Windows', value: 'win'},
{label: 'macOS', value: 'mac'},
]
}>
<TabItem value="win">Use Ctrl + C to copy.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="mac">Use Command + C to copy.</TabItem>
</Tabs>
<Tabs
groupId="operating-systems"
defaultValue="win"
values={[
{label: 'Windows', value: 'win'},
{label: 'macOS', value: 'mac'},
]
}>
<TabItem value="win">Use Ctrl + V to paste.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="mac">Use Command + V to paste.</TabItem>
</Tabs>
Use Ctrl + C to copy.
Use Ctrl + V to paste.

For all tab groups that have the same groupId, the possible values do not need to be the same. If one tab group with chooses an value that does not exist in another tab group with the same groupId, the tab group with the missing value won't change its tab. You can see that from the following example. Try to select Linux, and the above tab groups doesn't change.

<Tabs
groupId="operating-systems"
defaultValue="win"
values={[
{label: 'Windows', value: 'win'},
{label: 'macOS', value: 'mac'},
{label: 'Linux', value: 'linux'},
]}>
<TabItem value="win">I am Windows.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="mac">I am macOS.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="linux">I am Linux.</TabItem>
</Tabs>
I am Windows.

Tab choices with different groupIds will not interfere with each other:

<Tabs
groupId="operating-systems"
defaultValue="win"
values={[
{label: 'Windows', value: 'win'},
{label: 'macOS', value: 'mac'},
]
}>
<TabItem value="win">Windows in windows.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="mac">macOS is macOS.</TabItem>
</Tabs>
<Tabs
groupId="non-mac-operating-systems"
defaultValue="win"
values={[
{label: 'Windows', value: 'win'},
{label: 'Unix', value: 'unix'},
]
}>
<TabItem value="win">Windows is windows.</TabItem>
<TabItem value="unix">Unix is unix.</TabItem>
</Tabs>
Windows in windows.
Windows is windows.

Customizing tabs#

You might want to customize the appearance of certain set of tabs. To do that you can pass the string in className prop and the specified CSS class will be added to the Tabs component:

import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs';
import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
<Tabs
className="unique-tabs"
defaultValue="apple"
values={[
{label: 'Apple', value: 'apple'},
{label: 'Orange', value: 'orange'},
{label: 'Banana', value: 'banana'},
]}>
<TabItem value="apple">This is an apple 🍎</TabItem>
<TabItem value="orange">This is an orange 🍊</TabItem>
<TabItem value="banana">This is a banana 🍌</TabItem>
</Tabs>;
This is an apple 🍎