| Aqsa Nabi
The model-driven forms have an extensive capability of adding tabs on a single form. This is perfect use when the requirement includes viewing or configuring a lot of data and properties in a single form. Sometimes, a single form is not enough for configuration, and there are multiple different types of configurations needed, that functionally should not fit in the same space.
To achieve such a purpose, the model-driven forms have the option to add tabs to the same form. This enhances the user experience by giving them a way to add as many columns to the table as they want and have various representations in different sections split into tabs.
Add Tabs to Model-driven forms
The model-driven forms have the ‘General’ tab by default. This can be renamed as per the need. The new model-driven forms have an easy and interactive UI that does not confuse the user, instead makes the whole configuration of adding tabs much easier than the classic version.
Add Components in the Tabs
The tabs are just another form within the same table. So, it consists of all the properties that a model-driven form consists of. The sub-grids, quick create forms, quick views, sections, and all the other components are easily configurable in the tabs.
Everything is doable when you have tabs in place. There could be the proper classification of the configurable items, and those can be separated using tabs. So, the information stays in its own league and there is no confusion for the end-user as well.
Here is an example of how tabs configuration is useful when a bunch of operations that involve complex functionalities exists in a single entity.
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