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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.