Insert containers separated into tabs.

Inserts a number of multi-element containers as tabs. Tabs are a navigational element that allows users to easily move between groups of related content.

To add elements to the returned containers, you can use the with notation (preferred) or just call methods directly on the returned object. See examples below.

Warning

All the content of every tab is always sent to and rendered on the frontend. Conditional rendering is currently not supported.

Function signature[source]

st.tabs(tabs)

Parameters

tabs (list of str)

Creates a tab for each string in the list. The first tab is selected by default. The string is used as the name of the tab and can optionally contain GitHub-flavored Markdown of the following types: Bold, Italics, Strikethroughs, Inline Code, and Links.

Unsupported Markdown elements are unwrapped so only their children (text contents) render. Display unsupported elements as literal characters by backslash-escaping them. E.g., "1\. Not an ordered list".

See the body parameter of st.markdown for additional, supported Markdown directives.

Returns

(list of containers)

A list of container objects.

Examples

You can use the with notation to insert any element into a tab:

import streamlit as st

tab1, tab2, tab3 = st.tabs(["Cat", "Dog", "Owl"])

with tab1:
    st.header("A cat")
    st.image("https://static.streamlit.io/examples/cat.jpg", width=200)
with tab2:
    st.header("A dog")
    st.image("https://static.streamlit.io/examples/dog.jpg", width=200)
with tab3:
    st.header("An owl")
    st.image("https://static.streamlit.io/examples/owl.jpg", width=200)

Or you can just call methods directly on the returned objects:

import streamlit as st
import numpy as np

tab1, tab2 = st.tabs(["πŸ“ˆ Chart", "πŸ—ƒ Data"])
data = np.random.randn(10, 1)

tab1.subheader("A tab with a chart")
tab1.line_chart(data)

tab2.subheader("A tab with the data")
tab2.write(data)
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