In my opinion, you have to learn the chord shapes (below) and trust your ear. If you’re looking for that type of tab, search and you’ll likely find what you’re looking for ( example). The tabs below aren’t going to attempt to capture the timing, individual down-strums & up-strums, and other such subtleties. Then, you can play a D chord with all six strings (i.e., 000232) and it sounds great! My approach to these tabs
Lower the low-E string until the 6th string sounds the same as the 4th string.
A quick cheat to do this: use your 4th string (which is also D, though an octave higher) as a reference note. The tabs below assume you’ve tuned your low-E string down to a “D” note (aka drop-D tuning). See my sheet music for all the lyrics w/ chords included.