# Adding a Container To assemble the basic elements of a page, you need a container component. The <div>, <list>, and <tabs> components are commonly used for laying out page elements. You can use <div> as the container in a page with simple layout. <div> supports a variety of child components required to build the page. ## <List> If you use <div> repeatedly to render a complex page, frame freezing may occur. In this case, use the <list> component instead of <div> to lay out list items, which provides a smooth list scrolling. **NOTE** that <list> supports only <list-item> as it child components. The following is an example: ``` {{$item.value}} ``` ``` /* xxx.css */ .desc-text { width: 683.3px; font-size: 35.4px; } ``` ``` // xxx.js export default { data: { textList: [{value: 'JS FA'}], }, } ``` To shorten the sample code, the list contains only one <list-item> component that holds only one <text> component. In practice, a <list> has multiple <list-item> components, and a <list-item> has multiple child components. ## <Tabs> If your page needs to be dynamically loaded, use the <tabs> component. This component supports the change event, which is triggered after tab switching. A <tabs> component can hold only one <tab-bar> and one <tab-content>. The following is an example: ``` Home Index Detail ``` ``` // xxx.js export default { data: { homeImage: '/common/home.png', indexImage: '/common/index.png', detailImage: '/common/detail.png', }, } ``` The <tab-content> component is used to display the tab content, which vertically fills the remaining space of the <tabs> component by default.