The Tabbed Page Component creates custom tabs to display full page content under each tab. In order to use this component you must submit a Jira ticket to CNMP requesting it be enabled for a specific page.
The Tabbed Page Component displays full page content under each tab. Users navigate between the tabs to access the page content. The component displays one page per tab.
The difference between this component and the tab component, is this component uses the standard sorting choices (building the tab order) of publication date, collection year or month, and reference year or month.
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Tabbed Page Component is useful for pages designed to display a high volume of previews for related datasets, releases, reports, interactive visuals, and other such pages. Tabs provide a manner by which to organize these related materials.
An author should use the Tabbed Page Component when they have a set of pages, releases, or data that lends to being organized by a preset order to parse items.
In contrast to the Tab Component, the Tabbed Page Component does not rely on the author to manually order the tabs; instead, it offers preset manners by which to order the tabs. Tabs can be built by collection month/year, by reference month/year, or by publication date and can be sorted manually or from oldest to newest or newest to oldest.
Content authors should use the Tabbed Page Component when they have a set of pages, releases, or data that tends to be organized by a preset order to parse items.
Individual pages that are in tabs should have redirects to their tabbed versions. While not required for these pages it is strongly recommended.
This way users can only see the tabbed version of the page. The redirect is found under Page Properties > Advanced tab.
MARCH 18, 2021 — A new report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau shows the average one-way commute in the United States increased to a new high of 27.6 minutes in 2019. The Travel Time to Work in the United States: 2019 report summarizes trends in travel time among U.S. workers between 2006 and 2019 using single-year data from the American Community Survey (ACS). The report then moves on to take a closer look at patterns in travel time along selected characteristics using 2019 ACS estimates.
Highlights from the report include:
The new data presented in this report are based on the ACS sample interviewed from Jan. 1, 2019, through Dec. 31, 2019. ACS questions related to travel focus only on commuting and do not include nonwork trips. The average travel time excludes workers who worked from home in 2019.
No news release associated with this report. Tip Sheet only.
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The configure dialog allows the content author to define multiple tabs. See below for more about the Tab Component dialog.
Expand the section below to see the Tabbed Page Component HTML output.