How to build an accordion with JavaScript

itzami

Rui Sousa

Posted on June 3, 2021

How to build an accordion with JavaScript

I've seen some people battle with accordions in the past and, well, it wasn't pretty. BUT... It's completely understandable! An accordion has a whole lot going on and on a first sight it seems like all the functionalities will be pretty hard to develop.

Well... I'm here to prove that that is wrong and I want to help you build your very best JavaScript accordion πŸ˜„ And in this tutorial you'll learn a bunch of stuff like:

  • selecting elements on the DOM
  • forEach loops
  • event listeners
  • toggling class lists

If you're really just interested on the code, here's a link to the CodePen with it. I also have a YouTube video for it if you're more of a visual person πŸ‘‡

So, with all of that out of the way, let's start this post 😎

Starting with the HTML

We'll start by create a basic structure of the HTML. And here it's pretty straight forward. You'll want a wrapping <div> that will hold your accordion component and inside it you'll have different accordion items. Inside each item you'll want to have two things:

  1. the content that will always show (it can be just a <p> or it can be an entire <div>)
  2. a <div> that will have the content that will collapse (AKA, that will appear and disappear when you press 1)).

A made a image to illustrate the basic structure and I advise you, specially when you're starting, to sketch out what you're intending to build since it makes it easier to split everything into smaller parts so you can work on them separately.

Initial structure of the accordion

So, now that we have our structure, we can build it. In my example below, as you can see I have the mentioned <div> that has everything inside and that's our accordion component and inside each I have an accordionTitle, which represents the content that will always be showing, and a accordionContent that will be the content that will appear and disappear. You can change up the HTML elements that you use (maybe you would prefer to use <ul> and <li>) but that's on you! And that's our HTML πŸŽ‰

<body>
  <h1>Accordion</h1>

  <div>
    <div class="accordionItem">
      <h2 class="accordionTitle">Tab 1</h2>
      <div class="accordionContent">
        <p>Information here</p>
      </div>
    </div>

    <div class="accordionItem">
      <h2 class="accordionTitle">Tab 2</h2>
      <div class="accordionContent">
        <p>Information here</p>
      </div>
    </div>

    <div class="accordionItem">
      <h2 class="accordionTitle">Tab 3</h2>
      <div class="accordionContent">
        <p>Information here</p>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
</body>
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A step further with our CSS

We have our HTML up and that's great but that's not an accordion. We have at least to hide accordionContent to at least make it look like one so that's what we're going to do. We simply want to hide that content on this step so what we're going to add to our CSS is the following.

body {
  margin-left: auto;
  margin-right: auto;
  max-width: 40em;
}

.accordionTitle {
  cursor: pointer;
  -moz-user-select: none;
  -webkit-user-select: none;
  -ms-user-select: none;
  user-select: none;
}

.accordionTitle + .accordionContent {
  display: none;
}
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The styling for the body and .accordionTitle it's just a matter of preference. I noticed, when clicking on .accordionTitle that I was getting highlighted text and I didn't wanted that so I chose to remove it with user-select and since I wanted for the user to know that this element was clickable, I changed the cursor that appears when you over it to a pointer. That's it.

The .accordionTitle + .accordionContent is what matters and, honestly, the adjacent sibling combinator is pretty much all you want here. It will style your .accordionContent based on if it immediately follows .accordionTitle and, on for my accordion structure, it's just what I need.

For now, this is the CSS that we'll need. We'll make some changes to it once we start working on our JavaScript but we'll get there right away!

It's alive... With JavaScript (and some CSS)

So, we've hidden our content but now we want to show it when we click on accordionTitle (or show it if it's showing, of course). So we want to grab this accordionTitle class and add an event listener to it, in this case a click event, and then some magic will end happening!

So, on our JavaScript we'll grab all the elements on our HTMl that have this .accordionTitle and we'll do it with querySelectorAll().

const accordionTitles = document.querySelectorAll(".accordionTitle")
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This piece of codes grabs all the elements that have this class name and returns a NodeList. A NodeList is an object that has a collection of nodes in it which, in this case, it's our elements that have the .accordionTitle in them, which means, our <h2>.

Now that we have our elements, we need to add to each of them a click event and for that we'll use a forEach loop.

A forEach loop allows us to go through each element of an array (or, in this case, the NodeList) and do something to it. It's very similar to a .map() but, unlike .map(), it will not return anything from it because any return inside a forEach will be discarded. I'm using the forEach because I want to use the original data from my array/nodeList and do something with it instead of changing it.

So, we'll do something like the following.

accordionTitles.forEach(accordionTitle => {})
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Now, inside these brackets we can define what we're doing with each item, our accordionTitle, and we know that we want for something to happen when we click on them so we'll add an eventListener to them.

accordionTitles.forEach(accordionTitle => {
  accordionTitle.addEventListener("click", () => {})
})
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Here's we saying that, when we click on an accordionTitle something will happen and we'll define what happens inside these new brackets.

So... We know that now our div with the content is hidden and we want to show it so... how can we do that? Here's my approach to it:

On our CSS we're currently hiding the content based on our .accordionTitle element and I want to keep that logic to show it as well. Which means that I want to alter our .accordionTitle in some way that it allow for our .accordionContent to have a different styling (throwback to the adjacent sibling combinator).

On the JavaScript we'll change the classList of our accordionTitle by adding (or removing) a new class called is-open.

accordionTitles.forEach(accordionTitle => {
  accordionTitle.addEventListener("click", () => {
    accordionTitle.classList.toggle("is-open")
  })
})
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So, what's my way of thinking here?
If I can add a class to my accordionTitle, and I'm controlling this accordion content with that same element on my CSS, I can add a new CSS rule which tells my code that, when the .accordionTitle also has the class is-open, then the .accordionContent that comes immediately after it should have a display: block and it looks like this.

.accordionTitle.is-open + .accordionContent {
  display: block;
}

So, once again, I'm controlling .accordionContent visibility, or presence, with .accordionTitle and by toggling a new class to .accordionTitle, I'm able to show and hide .accordionContent as I wish.

And now, it just works, if you would try it. And you have a fully functioning accordion with very few lines of JavaScript, two classes in the HTML and pretty much just two CSS rules. Isn't that amazing? 🀯

Let's go even further

Currently our code allows us to open and close any tab but all the others that might be open stay like that and that's not really the perfect accordion so let's work on it, shall we?
Currently we're toggling each element independently but that's not what we want. We want to check if there are already any element that are open already and we want to remove that property so this is what I'm going to do:

I'll start by removing our toggle and first I want to create an if/else statement. On my if I want to check if the accordionTitle has the class is-open and, if it does, I want to remove it. We'll do the following on our JavaScript

if (accordionTitle.classList.contains("is-open")) {
  accordionTitle.classList.remove("is-open")
}

Now, my else will be responsible for adding the is-open class and we can do it like this

else {
    accordionTitle.classList.add("is-open");
}

At this point we're basically at the same level that we were with the toggle. Now, on this else statement I want to see if there are any other elements with the .is-open class and, if there are, I want to remove it and we can do it like this.

First we do a querySelectorAll for all the elements with the .is-open class like this

const accordionTitlesWithIsOpen = document.querySelectorAll(".is-open")

Then we'll need to run a new forEach loop to iterate over each element so we can remove the class and that looks something like this

accordionTitlesWithIsOpen.forEach(accordionTitleWithIsOpen => {
  accordionTitleWithIsOpen.classList.remove("is-open")
})

And we're done! Now once you click on a tab the other will close and we have a fully functioning accordion! πŸŽ‰πŸ•Ί
Here's the working code πŸ‘‡

Here's a challenge for you

I would like to challenge you to do something now: using what you've learned so far, I would like for you to create a button that would close and open all the tabs. Are you up for the challenge? If you are, send me your code to my Twitter πŸ˜„

And that's it!

Hopefully, you learned everything you need to know about building your own JavaScript Accordion and you understood that it's not that hard to make something that rocks πŸ’ͺ
Let me know what you thought about this post and feel free to follow me on Twitter 🀘

πŸ’– πŸ’ͺ πŸ™… 🚩
itzami
Rui Sousa

Posted on June 3, 2021

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