\name{tabsetPanel} \alias{tabsetPanel} \title{Create a tabset panel} \usage{ tabsetPanel(..., id = NULL) } \arguments{ \item{...}{\code{\link{tabPanel}} elements to include in the tabset} \item{id}{If provided, you can use \code{input$}\emph{\code{id}} in your server logic to determine which of the current tabs is active. The value will correspond to the \code{value} argument that is passed to \code{\link{tabPanel}}.} } \value{ A tabset that can be passed to \code{\link{mainPanel}} } \description{ Create a tabset that contains \code{\link{tabPanel}} elements. Tabsets are useful for dividing output into multiple independently viewable sections. } \examples{ # Show a tabset that includes a plot, summary, and # table view of the generated distribution mainPanel( tabsetPanel( tabPanel("Plot", plotOutput("plot")), tabPanel("Summary", verbatimTextOutput("summary")), tabPanel("Table", tableOutput("table")) ) ) }