Accordion
A pretty helpful component to show organized information to the user.
Click the accordions below to expand/collapse the accordion content.
This is the first item's accordion body.
It is shown by default, until the collapse plugin adds
the appropriate classes that we use to style each
element. These classes control the overall appearance,
as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions.
You can modify any of this with custom CSS or
overriding our default variables. It's also worth
noting that just about any HTML can go within the
.accordion-body
, though the transition
does limit overflow.
This is the second item's accordion body.
It is hidden by default, until the collapse plugin
adds the appropriate classes that we use to style each
element. These classes control the overall appearance,
as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions.
You can modify any of this with custom CSS or
overriding our default variables. It's also worth
noting that just about any HTML can go within the
.accordion-body
, though the transition
does limit overflow.
This is the third item's accordion body.
It is hidden by default, until the collapse plugin
adds the appropriate classes that we use to style each
element. These classes control the overall appearance,
as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions.
You can modify any of this with custom CSS or
overriding our default variables. It's also worth
noting that just about any HTML can go within the
.accordion-body
, though the transition
does limit overflow.
Add .accordion-flush
to remove the default
background-color, some borders, and some rounded corners to
render accordions edge-to-edge with their parent container.
Placeholder content for this accordion, which is
intended to demonstrate the
.accordion-flush
class. This is the first
item's accordion body.
Placeholder content for this accordion, which is
intended to demonstrate the
.accordion-flush
class. This is the
second item's accordion body. Let's imagine this being
filled with some actual content.
Placeholder content for this accordion, which is
intended to demonstrate the
.accordion-flush
class. This is the third
item's accordion body. Nothing more exciting happening
here in terms of content, but just filling up the
space to make it look, at least at first glance, a bit
more representative of how this would look in a
real-world application.