Weired. I'm quite sure that that would have worked before. When
initializing it was looking for the containers by id of the ul's
anchors, no matter which structure they are in...+

--Klaus



On 1 Dez., 15:00, Scott González <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Dec 1, 8:10 am, "Richard D. Worth" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Sorry, remove the header level.
>
> FYI: I've modified tabs to work with the previous markup. You can now
> put any content you want inside a tabs container. The first list that
> it finds in DOM order will be used as the actual tabs and only the
> elements that match the hrefs of those tabs will be used as
> containers. This means that you can add extra depth to your DOM, as in
> this example with a wrapper around the tabs. You can also place
> content in the tabs container between the ul and the actual content
> divs to create a section of content that will always be visible
> between the tabs and the content, regardless of which tab is open.

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