Without using JavaScript you're limited to using CSS transitions, where available. And while these are pretty impressive, they're not particularly great, so far as I've yet found, for conditional animation; they can basically animate from a starting point to another point and then back (based on the native browser events available in the browser itself), with JS you could add/remove additional classes and have the div
elements move around to your heart's content, but not with 'just' CSS (though I'd love to be proven wrong on this).
The best I've been able to come up with, so far, is:
#left {
float:left;
width:200px;
}
.right {
height: 0;
background-color: #fff;
margin-left: 205px;
overflow: hidden;
-webkit-transition: all 1s linear;
-ms-transition: all 1s linear;
-o-transition: all 1s linear;
-moz-transition: all 1s linear;
transition: all 1s linear;
}
.right:target {
display: block;
height: 5em;
background-color: #ffa;
-webkit-transition: all 1s linear;
-ms-transition: all 1s linear;
-o-transition: all 1s linear;
-moz-transition: all 1s linear;
transition: all 1s linear;
}
JS Fiddle demo.
And this doesn't slide from the side (though you can do that if you want to) because it didn't look good, given the content re-reflow that was happening as the width of the element changed.
Edited because I think I may have misinterpreted a portion of the original question:
...I'd like without any javascript
That being the case, and the comment (below) seems to suggest that jQuery's an okay option, this might be worthwhile as a demonstration:
$('#left a').click(
function(){
var div = $('div').not('#left').eq($(this).index('#left a'));
var others = $('div[data-visible="true"]');
others.each(
function(){
$(this).animate({
'left' : '2000px'
},1000,function(){
$(this).removeAttr('style data-visible');
});
});
if (div.attr('data-visible')) {
div.animate({
'left' : '2000px'
},1000,function(){
$(this).removeAttr('style data-visible');
});
}
else {
div.animate({
'left' : '210px'
},1000).attr('data-visible',true);
}
});
JS Fiddle demo.
References: