The following example shows a tab/accordion element with only one entry, where the element setting “Always show tabs” has been deactivated. In this case, it is no longer apparent that this is a tab/accordion element.
If only one entry has been created in a tab/accordion, the label for this individual tab can be suppressed in the tab display by deactivating the “Always show tabs” element setting. In this case, only the containers that have been created are displayed.
Tab / Accordion element with only one entry

This is a typographical dummy text. It can be used to check if all the letters are there and how they look. Sometimes, sentences containing all the letters of the alphabet are used. This one is very well known: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy old dog. Also important are âçcèñtš, as well as small caps, kerning, and ligatures (very clever). These days, emojis like 😇😀😉👍🏻🐶🍎 or ⚽️ are also popular in texts.
The following example shows the same tab/accordion element with only one entry, where the element setting “Always show tabs” is activated. This is the default setting.
Tab / Accordion element with only one entry

This is a typographical dummy text. It can be used to check if all the letters are there and how they look. Sometimes, sentences containing all the letters of the alphabet are used. This one is very well known: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy old dog. Also important are âçcèñtš, as well as small caps, kerning, and ligatures (very clever). These days, emojis like 😇😀😉👍🏻🐶🍎 or ⚽️ are also popular in texts.