The HTML table model allows authors to arrange data -- text, preformatted
text, images, links, forms, form fields, other tables, etc. -- into rows and
columns of cells.
Each table may have an associated caption (see the
CAPTION element) that provides a short description of the table's
purpose. A longer description may also be provided (via the
summary attribute) for the benefit of people using speech or
Braille-based user agents.
Table rows may be grouped into a head, foot, and
body sections, (via the THEAD, TFOOT and TBODY
elements, respectively). Row groups convey additional structural information
and may be rendered by user agents in ways that emphasize this structure. User
agents may exploit the head/body/foot division to support scrolling of body
sections independently of the head and foot sections. When long tables are
printed, the head and foot information may be repeated on each page that
contains table data.
Authors may also group columns to provide
additional structural information that may be exploited by user agents.
Furthermore, authors may declare column properties at the start of a table
definition (via the COLGROUP and COL elements) in a way that enables
user agents to render the table incrementally rather than having to wait for
all the table data to arrive before rendering.
Table cells may either contain "header" information
(see the
TH element) or "data" (see the TD element). Cells may span multiple
rows and columns. The HTML 4 table model allows authors to label each cell so
that non-visual user agents may more easily
communicate heading information about the cell to the user. Not only do these
mechanisms greatly assist users with visual disabilities, they make it possible
for multi-modal wireless browsers with limited display capabilities (e.g.,
Web-enabled pagers and phones) to handle tables.
Tables should not be used purely as a means to layout document content as
this may present problems when rendering to non-visual media. Additionally,
when used with graphics, these tables may force users to scroll horizontally to
view a table designed on a system with a larger display. To minimize these
problems, authors should use style sheets
to control layout rather than tables.
Here's a simple table that illustrates some of the features of the HTML
table model. The following table definition:
<TABLE border="1"
summary="This table gives some statistics about fruit
flies: average height and weight, and percentage
with red eyes (for both males and females).">
<CAPTION><EM>A test table with merged cells</EM></CAPTION>
<TR><TH rowspan="2"><TH colspan="2">Average
<TH rowspan="2">Red<BR>eyes
<TR><TH>height<TH>weight
<TR><TH>Males<TD>1.9<TD>0.003<TD>40%
<TR><TH>Females<TD>1.7<TD>0.002<TD>43%
</TABLE>
might be rendered something like this on a tty device:
A test table with merged cells
/-----------------------------------------\
| | Average | Red |
| |-------------------| eyes |
| | height | weight | |
|-----------------------------------------|
| Males | 1.9 | 0.003 | 40% |
|-----------------------------------------|
| Females | 1.7 | 0.002 | 43% |
\-----------------------------------------/
This attribute specifies the desired width of the entire table and is
intended for visual user agents. When the value is a percentage value, the
value is relative to the user agent's available horizontal space. In the
absence of any width specification, table width is determined by the user
agent.
The
TABLE element contains all other elements that specify caption,
rows, content, and formatting.
The following informative list describes what operations user agents may
carry out when rendering a table:
Make the table summary available to the user. Authors should provide
a summary of a table's content and structure so that people using non-visual
user agents may better understand it.
Render the caption, if one is defined.
Render the table header, if one is specified. Render the table footer, if
one is specified. User agents must know where to render the header and footer.
For instance, if the output medium is paged, user agents may put the header at
the top of each page and the footer at the bottom. Similarly, if the user agent
provides a mechanism to scroll the rows, the header may appear at the top of
the scrolled area and the footer at the bottom.
Group the columns according to any column group
specifications.
Render the cells, row by row and grouped in appropriate columns, between
the header and footer. Visual user agents should
format the table according to HTML attributes and style sheet
specification.
The HTML table model has been designed so that, with author assistance, user
agents may render tables incrementally (i.e., as
table rows arrive) rather than having to wait for all the data before beginning
to render.
In order for a user agent to format a table in one pass, authors must tell
the user agent:
The widths of these columns. Please consult the section on calculating the width of columns for details on how to
supply this information.
More precisely, a user agent may render a table in a single pass when the
column widths are specified using a combination of
COLGROUP and COL elements. If any of the columns are specified in
relative or percentage terms (see the section on
calculating the width of columns), authors must also specify the width of
the table itself.
The directionality of a table
is either the inherited directionality (the default is left-to-right) or that
specified by the dir attribute for the TABLE element.
For a left-to-right table, column zero is on the left side and row zero is
at the top. For a right-to-left table, column zero is on the right side and row
zero is at the top.
When a user agent allots extra cells to a row (see the section on calculating the number of columns in a table), extra row
cells are added to the right of the table for left-to-right tables and to the
left side for right-to-left tables.
Note that TABLE is the only element on which dir
reverses the visual order of the columns; a single table row (TR) or a
group of columns (COLGROUP) cannot be independently reversed.
When set for the TABLE element, the dir attribute also affects the
direction of text within table cells (since the dir attribute is inherited by
block-level elements).
To specify a right-to-left table, set the dir attribute as follows:
<TABLE dir="RTL">
...the rest of the table...
</TABLE>
The direction of text in individual cells can be changed by setting the dir
attribute in an element that defines the cell. Please consult the section on bidirectional text for more information
on text direction issues.
Visual user agents allow sighted people to quickly grasp the structure of
the table from the headings as well as the caption. A consequence of this is
that captions will often be inadequate as a summary of the purpose and
structure of the table from the perspective of people relying on non-visual
user agents.
Visual user agents should avoid clipping any part of
the table including the caption, unless a means is provided to access all
parts, e.g., by horizontal or vertical scrolling. We recommend that the caption
text be wrapped to the same width as the table. (See also the section on recommended layout algorithms.)
Table rows may be grouped into a table head, table
foot, and one or more table body sections, using the THEAD,
TFOOT and TBODY elements, respectively. This division enables
user agents to support scrolling of table bodies independently of the table
head and foot. When long tables are printed, the table head and foot
information may be repeated on each page that contains table data.
The table head and table foot should contain information about the table's
columns. The table body should contain rows of table data.
When present, each THEAD, TFOOT, and TBODY
contains a row group. Each row group must contain at least one row,
defined by the TR element.
This example illustrates the order and structure of table heads, feet, and
bodies.
<TABLE>
<THEAD>
<TR> ...header information...
</THEAD>
<TFOOT>
<TR> ...footer information...
</TFOOT>
<TBODY>
<TR> ...first row of block one data...
<TR> ...second row of block one data...
</TBODY>
<TBODY>
<TR> ...first row of block two data...
<TR> ...second row of block two data...
<TR> ...third row of block two data...
</TBODY>
</TABLE>
TFOOT must appear before TBODY within a TABLE
definition so that user agents can render the foot before receiving all of the
(potentially numerous) rows of data. The following summarizes which tags are
required and which may be omitted:
The
TBODY start tag is always required except when the table contains
only one table body and no table head or foot sections. The TBODY
end tag may always be safely omitted.
The start tags for THEAD and TFOOT are required when the table head
and foot sections are present respectively, but the corresponding end tags may
always be safely omitted.
Conforming user agent parsers must obey these rules for reasons of backward
compatibility.
The table of the previous example could be shortened by removing certain end
tags, as in:
<TABLE>
<THEAD>
<TR> ...header information...
<TFOOT>
<TR> ...footer information...
<TBODY>
<TR> ...first row of block one data...
<TR> ...second row of block one data...
<TBODY>
<TR> ...first row of block two data...
<TR> ...second row of block two data...
<TR> ...third row of block two data...
</TABLE>
The
THEAD, TFOOT, and TBODY sections must contain the same number of
columns.
Column groups allow authors to create
structural divisions within a table. Authors may highlight this structure
through style sheets or HTML attributes (e.g., the
rules attribute for the TABLE element). For an example of the
visual presentation of column groups, please consult the
sample table.
A table may either contain a single implicit column group (no
COLGROUP element delimits the columns) or any number of explicit
column groups (each delimited by an instance of the
COLGROUP element).
The
COL element allows authors to share attributes among several columns
without implying any structural grouping. The "span" of the COL
element is the number of columns that will share the element's attributes.
This attribute specifies a default width for each column in the current
column group. In addition to the standard pixel, percentage, and relative
values, this attribute allows the special form "0*" (zero asterisk) which means
that the width of the each column in the group should be the minimum width
necessary to hold the column's contents. This implies that a column's entire
contents must be known before its width may be correctly computed. Authors
should be aware that specifying "0*" will prevent visual user agents from
rendering a table incrementally.
This attribute is overridden for any column in the column group whose
width is specified via a COL element.
The
COLGROUP element creates an explicit column group. The number of
columns in the column group may be specified in two, mutually exclusive
ways:
The element's span attribute (default value 1) specifies
the number of columns in the group.
Each
COL element in the COLGROUP represents one or more columns
in the group.
The advantage of using the span attribute is that authors
may group together information about column widths. Thus, if a table contains
forty columns, all of which have a width of 20 pixels, it is easier to
write:
<COLGROUP span="40" width="20">
</COLGROUP>
than:
<COLGROUP>
<COL width="20">
<COL width="20">
...a total of forty COL elements...
</COLGROUP>
When it is necessary to single out a column (e.g., for style information, to
specify width information, etc.) within a group, authors must identify that
column with a COL element. Thus, to apply special style information to the
last column of the previous table, we single it out as follows:
The width attribute of the
COLGROUP element is inherited by all 40 columns. The first COL
element refers to the first 39 columns (doing nothing special to them) and the
second one assigns an id value to the fortieth column so that style sheets may
refer to it.
The table in the following example contains two column groups. The first
column group contains 10 columns and the second contains 5 columns. The default
width for each column in the first column group is 50 pixels. The width of each
column in the second column group will be the minimum required for that
column.
This attribute, whose value must be an integer > 0, specifies the number
of columns "spanned" by the COL element; the COL element shares its attributes with
all the columns it spans. The default value for this attribute is 1 (i.e., the
COL element refers to a single column). If the
span attribute is set to N > 1, the current COL
element shares its attributes with the next N-1 columns.
This attribute specifies a default width for each column spanned by the
current
COL element. It has the same meaning as the
width attribute for the COLGROUP element and overrides it.
The
COL element allows authors to group together attribute
specifications for table columns. The COL does not group
columns together structurally -- that is the role of the
COLGROUP element. COL elements are empty and serve only as a
support for attributes. They may appear inside or outside an explicit column
group (i.e., COLGROUP element).
The width attribute for COL refers to the width of each
column in the element's span.
There are two ways to determine the number of columns in a table (in order
of precedence):
If the
TABLE element contains any COLGROUP or COL
elements, user agents should calculate the number of columns by summing the
following:
For each
COL element, take the value of its
span attribute (default value 1).
For each COLGROUP element containing at least one COL
element, ignore the span attribute for the
COLGROUP element. For each COL element, perform the calculation of
step 1.
For each empty COLGROUP element, take the value of its
span attribute (default value 1).
Otherwise, if the TABLE element contains no
COLGROUP or COL elements, user agents should base the number of
columns on what is required by the rows. The number of columns is equal to the
number of columns required by the row with the most columns, including cells
that span multiple columns. For any row that has fewer than this number of
columns, the end of that row should be padded with empty cells. The "end" of a
row depends on the table
directionality.
It is an error if a table contains COLGROUP or COL
elements and the two calculations do not result in the same number of
columns.
Once the user agent has calculated the number of columns in the table, it
may group them into column groups.
For example, for each of the following tables, the two column calculation
methods should result in three columns. The first three tables may be rendered
incrementally.
A fixed width specification is given in pixels (e.g.,
width="30"). A fixed-width specification enables incremental
rendering.
Percentage
A percentage specification (e.g., width="20%")
is based on the percentage of the horizontal space available to the table
(between the current left and right margins, including floats). Note that this
space does not depend on the table itself, and thus percentage specifications
enable incremental rendering.
Proportional
Proportional specifications (e.g., width="3*")
refer to portions of the horizontal space required by a table. If the
table width is given a fixed value via the width
attribute of the TABLE element, user agents may render the table
incrementally even with proportional columns.
However, if the table does not have a fixed width, user agents must receive
all table data before they can determine the horizontal space required by the
table. Only then may this space be allotted to proportional columns.
If an author specifies no width information for a column, a user agent may
not be able to incrementally format the table since it must wait for the entire
column of data to arrive in order to allot an appropriate width.
If column widths prove to be too narrow for the contents of a particular
table cell, user agents may choose to reflow the table.
The table in this example contains six columns. The first one does not
belong to an explicit column group. The next three belong to the first explicit
column group and the last two belong to the second explicit column group. This
table cannot be formatted incrementally since it contains proportional column
width specifications and no value for the
width attribute for the TABLE element.
Once the (visual) user agent has received the table's data: the available
horizontal space will be alloted by the user agent as follows: First the user
agent will allot 30 pixels to columns one and two. Then, the minimal space
required for the third column will be reserved. The remaining horizontal space
will be divided into six equal portions (since 2* + 1* + 3* = 6 portions).
Column four (2*) will receive two of these portions, column five (1*) will
receive one, and column six (3*) will receive three.
We have set the value of the align attribute in the third column
group to "center". All cells in every column in this group will inherit this
value, but may override it. In fact, the final COL does just that, by specifying
that every cell in the column it governs will be aligned along the ":"
character.
In the following table, the column width specifications allow the user agent
to format the table incrementally:
The first ten columns will be 15 pixels wide each. The last two columns will
each receive half of the remaining 50 pixels. Note that the COL
elements appear only so that an id value may be specified for the last two
columns.
Note. Although the
width attribute on the TABLE element is not deprecated,
authors are encouraged to use style sheets to specify table widths.
The
TR elements acts as a container for a row of table cells. The end
tag may be omitted.
This sample table contains three rows, each begun by the TR
element:
<TABLE summary="This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR> ...A header row...
<TR> ...First row of data...
<TR> ...Second row of data......the rest of the table...
</TABLE>
<!ELEMENT (TH|TD) - O (%flow;)* -- table header cell, table data cell-->
<!-- Scope is simpler than headers attribute for common tables -->
<!ENTITY % Scope "(row|col|rowgroup|colgroup)">
<!-- TH is for headers, TD for data, but for cells acting as both use TD -->
<!ATTLIST (TH|TD) -- header or data cell --
%attrs; -- %coreattrs, %i18n, %events --
abbr%Text; #IMPLIED -- abbreviation for header cell --
axisCDATA #IMPLIED -- comma-separated list of related headers--
headersIDREFS #IMPLIED -- list of id's for header cells --
scope%Scope; #IMPLIED -- scope covered by header cells --
rowspanNUMBER 1 -- number of rows spanned by cell --
colspanNUMBER 1 -- number of cols spanned by cell --
%cellhalign; -- horizontal alignment in cells --
%cellvalign; -- vertical alignment in cells --
>
This attribute specifies the list of header cells that provide header
information for the current data cell. The value of this attribute is a
space-separated list of cell names; those cells must be named by setting their
id
attribute. Authors generally use the headers attribute to help non-visual
user agents render header information about data cells (e.g., header
information is spoken prior to the cell data), but the attribute may also be
used in conjunction with style sheets. See also the scope
attribute.
This attribute specifies the set of data cells for which the current header
cell provides header information. This attribute may be used in place of the
headers attribute, particularly for simple tables. When specified,
this attribute must have one of the following values:
row: The current cell provides header information for the
rest of the row that contains it (see also the section on table directionality).
col: The current cell provides header information for the
rest of the column that contains it.
rowgroup: The header cell provides header information for
the rest of the row group that contains it.
colgroup: The header cell provides header information for
the rest of the column group that contains it.
This attribute should be used to provide an abbreviated form of the cell's
content, and may be rendered by user agents when appropriate in place of the
cell's content. Abbreviated names should be short since user agents may render
them repeatedly. For instance, speech synthesizers may render the abbreviated
headers relating to a particular cell before rendering that cell's
content.
This attribute may be used to place a cell into conceptual categories that
can be considered to form axes in an n-dimensional space. User agents may give
users access to these categories (e.g., the user may query the user agent for
all cells that belong to certain categories, the user agent may present a table
in the form of a table of contents, etc.). Please consult the section on categorizing cells for more information. The value
of this attribute is a comma-separated list of category names.
This attribute specifies the number of rows spanned by the current cell.
The default value of this attribute is one ("1"). The value zero ("0") means
that the cell spans all rows from the current row to the last row of the table
section (THEAD, TBODY, or TFOOT) in which the cell is
defined.
This attribute specifies the number of columns spanned by the current cell.
The default value of this attribute is one ("1"). The value zero ("0") means
that the cell spans all columns from the current column to the last column of
the column group (COLGROUP) in which the cell is defined.
Deprecated. When
present, this boolean attribute tells visual user agents to disable automatic
text wrapping for this cell. Style sheets
should be used instead of this attribute to achieve wrapping effects.
Note. if used carelessly, this attribute may result in excessively
wide cells.
Table cells may contain two types of information: header
information and data. This
distinction enables user agents to render header and data cells distinctly,
even in the absence of style sheets. For example, visual user agents may
present header cell text with a bold font. Speech synthesizers may render
header information with a distinct voice inflection.
The
TH element defines a cell that contains header information. User
agents have two pieces of header information available: the contents of the TH
element and the value of the abbr attribute. User agents must render either
the contents of the cell or the value of the abbr attribute. For visual media,
the latter may be appropriate when there is insufficient space to render the
full contents of the cell. For non-visual media abbr may be used as an
abbreviation for table headers when these are rendered along with the contents
of the cells to which they apply.
For example, the following table contains four columns of data, each headed
by a column description.
<TABLE summary="This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR>
<TH>Name</TH>
<TH>Cups</TH>
<TH>Type of Coffee</TH>
<TH>Sugar?</TH>
<TR>
<TD>T. Sexton</TD>
<TD>10</TD>
<TD>Espresso</TD>
<TD>No</TD>
<TR>
<TD>J. Dinnen</TD>
<TD>5</TD>
<TD>Decaf</TD>
<TD>Yes</TD>
</TABLE>
A user agent rendering to a tty device might display this as follows:
Name Cups Type of Coffee Sugar?
T. Sexton 10 Espresso No
J. Dinnen 5 Decaf Yes
Cells may span several rows or columns. The number of rows or columns
spanned by a cell is set by the rowspan and
colspan attributes for the TH and TD elements.
In this table definition, we specify that the cell in row four, column two
should span a total of three columns, including the current column.
<TABLE border="1">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR><TH>Name<TH>Cups<TH>Type of Coffee<TH>Sugar?
<TR><TD>T. Sexton<TD>10<TD>Espresso<TD>No
<TR><TD>J. Dinnen<TD>5<TD>Decaf<TD>Yes
<TR><TD>A. Soria<TD colspan="3"><em>Not available</em>
</TABLE>
This table might be rendered on a tty device by a visual user agent as
follows:
Cups of coffee consumed by each senator
--------------------------------------
| Name |Cups|Type of Coffee|Sugar?|
--------------------------------------
|T. Sexton|10 |Espresso |No |
--------------------------------------
|J. Dinnen|5 |Decaf |Yes |
--------------------------------------
|A. Soria |Not available |
--------------------------------------
The next example illustrates (with the help of table borders) how cell
definitions that span more than one row or column affect the definition of
later cells. Consider the following table definition:
As cell "2" spans the first and second rows, the definition of the second
row will take it into account. Thus, the second TD in row two actually defines
the row's third cell. Visually, the table might be rendered to a tty device
as:
Defining overlapping cells is an error. User agents may vary in how they
handle this error (e.g., rendering may vary).
The following illegal example illustrates how one might create overlapping
cells. In this table, cell "5" spans two rows and cell "7" spans two columns,
so there is overlap in the cell between "7" and "9":
Note. The following sections describe the HTML table
attributes that concern visual formatting. When this specification was first
published in 1997, [CSS1] did not offer mechanisms to control all aspects of
visual table formatting. Since then, [CSS2] has added properties
to allow visual formatting of tables.
This attributes specifies the width (in pixels only) of the frame around a
table (see the Note below for more information about this attribute).
To help distinguish the cells of a table, we can set the
border attribute of the TABLE element. Consider a previous
example:
<TABLE border="1"
summary="This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR>
<TH>Name</TH>
<TH>Cups</TH>
<TH>Type of Coffee</TH>
<TH>Sugar?</TH>
<TR>
<TD>T. Sexton</TD>
<TD>10</TD>
<TD>Espresso</TD>
<TD>No</TD>
<TR>
<TD>J. Dinnen</TD>
<TD>5</TD>
<TD>Decaf</TD>
<TD>Yes</TD>
</TABLE>
In the following example, the user agent should show borders five pixels
thick on the left-hand and right-hand sides of the table, with rules drawn
between each column.
Other values of border imply
frame="border" and, unless otherwise specified,
rules="all".
The value "border" in the start tag of the TABLE element should be
interpreted as the value of the frame attribute. It implies
rules="all" and some default (non-zero) value for the
border attribute.
For example, the following definitions are equivalent:
This attribute specifies the alignment of data and the justification of
text in a cell. Possible values:
left: Left-flush data/Left-justify text. This is the default
value for table data.
center: Center data/Center-justify text. This is the default
value for table headers.
right: Right-flush data/Right-justify text.
justify: Double-justify text.
char: Align text around a specific character. If a user agent
doesn't support character alignment, behavior in the presence of this value is
unspecified.
This attribute specifies the vertical position of data within a cell.
Possible values:
top: Cell data is flush with the top of the cell.
middle: Cell data is centered vertically within the cell. This
is the default value.
bottom: Cell data is flush with the bottom of the cell.
baseline: All cells in the same row as a cell whose
valign attribute has this value should have their textual data
positioned so that the first text line occurs on a baseline common to all cells
in the row. This constraint does not apply to subsequent text lines in these
cells.
This attribute specifies a single character within a text fragment to act
as an axis for alignment. The default value for this attribute is the decimal
point character for the current language as set by the lang
attribute (e.g., the period (".") in English and the comma (",") in French).
User agents are not required to support this attribute.
When present, this attribute specifies the offset to the first occurrence
of the alignment character on each line. If a line doesn't include the
alignment character, it should be horizontally shifted to end at the alignment
position.
When
charoff is used to set the offset of an alignment character, the
direction of offset is determined by the current text direction (set by the dir
attribute). In left-to-right texts (the default), offset is from the left
margin. In right-to-left texts, offset is from the right margin. User agents
are not required to support this attribute.
The table in this example aligns a row of currency values along a decimal
point. We set the alignment character to "." explicitly.
When the contents of a cell contain more than one instance of the alignment
character specified by char and the contents wrap, user agent behavior is
undefined. Authors should therefore be attentive in their use of char.
Note. Visual user agents typically render TH elements
vertically and horizontally centered within the cell and with a bold font
weight.
The alignment of cell contents can be specified on a cell by cell basis, or
inherited from enclosing elements, such as the row, column or the table
itself.
The order of precedence (from highest to lowest) for the attributes
align, char, and charoff is the following:
An alignment attribute set on an element within a cell's data (e.g., P).
An alignment attribute set on a column grouping element (COL and
COLGROUP). When a cell is part of a multi-column span, the alignment
property is inherited from the cell definition at the beginning of the
span.
An alignment attribute set on a row or row grouping element (TR,
THEAD, TFOOT, and TBODY). When a cell is part of a multi-row span,
the alignment property is inherited from the cell definition at the beginning
of the span.
The order of precedence (from highest to lowest) for the attribute valign
(as well as the other inherited attributes lang, dir, and
style) is the following:
An attribute set on an element within a cell's data (e.g., P).
An attribute set on a row or row grouping element (TR,
THEAD, TFOOT, and TBODY). When a cell is part of a multi-row span,
the attribute value is inherited from the cell definition at the beginning of
the span.
An attribute set on a column grouping element (COL and
COLGROUP). When a cell is part of a multi-column span, the attribute
value is inherited from the cell definition at the beginning of the span.
Furthermore, when rendering cells, horizontal alignment is determined by
columns in preference to rows, while for vertical alignment, rows are given
preference over columns.
The default alignment for cells depends on the user agent. However, user
agents should substitute the default attribute for the current directionality
(i.e., not just "left" in all cases).
User agents that do not support the "justify" value of the
align attribute should use the value of the inherited directionality
in its place.
Note. Note that a cell may inherit an
attribute not from its parent but from the first cell in a span. This is an
exception to the general attribute inheritance rules.
This attribute specifies how much space the user agent should leave between
the left side of the table and the left-hand side of the leftmost column, the
top of the table and the top side of the topmost row, and so on for the right
and bottom of the table. The attribute also specifies the amount of space to
leave between cells.
This attribute specifies the amount of space between the border of the cell
and its contents. If the value of this attribute is a pixel length, all four
margins should be this distance from the contents. If the value of the
attribute is a percentage length, the top and bottom margins should be equally
separated from the content based on a percentage of the available vertical
space, and the left and right margins should be equally separated from the
content based on a percentage of the available horizontal space.
These two attributes control spacing between and within cells. The following
illustration explains how they relate:
In the following example, the cellspacing attribute specifies that
cells should be separated from each other and from the table frame by twenty
pixels. The cellpadding attribute specifies that the top margin of the
cell and the bottom margin of the cell will each be separated from the cell's
contents by 10% of the available vertical space (the total being 20%).
Similarly, the left margin of the cell and the right margin of the cell will
each be separated from the cell's contents by 10% of the available horizontal
space (the total being 20%).
If a table or given column has a fixed width,
cellspacing and cellpadding may demand more space than
assigned. User agents may give these attributes precedence over the
width attribute when a conflict occurs, but are not required to.
Non-visual user agents such as speech synthesizers and Braille-based devices
may use the following TD and TH element attributes to render table cells more
intuitively:
For a given data cell, the headers attribute lists which cells
provide pertinent header information. For this purpose, each header cell must
be named using the id attribute. Note that it's not always possible to make a
clean division of cells into headers or data. You should use the TD element
for such cells together with the id or scope attributes as appropriate.
For a given header cell,
the
scope attribute tells the user agent the data cells for which this
header provides information. Authors may choose to use this attribute instead
of
headers according to which is more convenient; the two attributes
fulfill the same function. The headers attribute is generally needed
when headers are placed in irregular positions with respect to the data they
apply to.
The abbr attribute specifies an abbreviated header for
header cells so that user agents may render header information more
rapidly.
In the following example, we assign header information to cells by setting
the
headers attribute. Each cell in the same column refers to the same
header cell (via the id attribute).
<TABLE border="1"
summary="This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR>
<TH id="t1">Name</TH>
<TH id="t2">Cups</TH>
<TH id="t3" abbr="Type">Type of Coffee</TH>
<TH id="t4">Sugar?</TH>
<TR>
<TD headers="t1">T. Sexton</TD>
<TD headers="t2">10</TD>
<TD headers="t3">Espresso</TD>
<TD headers="t4">No</TD>
<TR>
<TD headers="t1">J. Dinnen</TD>
<TD headers="t2">5</TD>
<TD headers="t3">Decaf</TD>
<TD headers="t4">Yes</TD>
</TABLE>
A speech synthesizer might render this table as follows:
Caption: Cups of coffee consumed by each senator
Summary: This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.
Name: T. Sexton, Cups: 10, Type: Espresso, Sugar: No
Name: J. Dinnen, Cups: 5, Type: Decaf, Sugar: Yes
Note how the header "Type of Coffee" is abbreviated to "Type" using the abbr
attribute.
Here is the same example substituting the scope attribute for the
headers attribute. Note the value "col" for the scope
attribute, meaning "all cells in the current column":
<TABLE border="1"
summary="This table charts the number of cups
of coffee consumed by each senator, the type
of coffee (decaf or regular), and whether
taken with sugar.">
<CAPTION>Cups of coffee consumed by each senator</CAPTION>
<TR>
<TH scope="col">Name</TH>
<TH scope="col">Cups</TH>
<TH scope="col" abbr="Type">Type of Coffee</TH>
<TH scope="col">Sugar?</TH>
<TR>
<TD>T. Sexton</TD>
<TD>10</TD>
<TD>Espresso</TD>
<TD>No</TD>
<TR>
<TD>J. Dinnen</TD>
<TD>5</TD>
<TD>Decaf</TD>
<TD>Yes</TD>
</TABLE>
Here's a somewhat more complex example illustrating other values for the
scope attribute:
<TABLE border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2"
summary="History courses offered in the community of
Bath arranged by course name, tutor, summary,
code, and fee">
<TR>
<TH colspan="5" scope="colgroup">Community Courses -- Bath Autumn 1997</TH>
</TR>
<TR>
<TH scope="col" abbr="Name">Course Name</TH>
<TH scope="col" abbr="Tutor">Course Tutor</TH>
<TH scope="col">Summary</TH>
<TH scope="col">Code</TH>
<TH scope="col">Fee</TH>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD scope="row">After the Civil War</TD>
<TD>Dr. John Wroughton</TD>
<TD>
The course will examine the turbulent years in England
after 1646. <EM>6 weekly meetings starting Monday 13th
October.</EM>
</TD>
<TD>H27</TD>
<TD>£32</TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD scope="row">An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England</TD>
<TD>Mark Cottle</TD>
<TD>
One day course introducing the early medieval
period reconstruction the Anglo-Saxons and
their society. <EM>Saturday 18th October.</EM>
</TD>
<TD>H28</TD>
<TD>£18</TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD scope="row">The Glory that was Greece</TD>
<TD>Valerie Lorenz</TD>
<TD>
Birthplace of democracy, philosophy, heartland of theater, home of
argument. The Romans may have done it but the Greeks did it
first. <EM>Saturday day school 25th October 1997</EM>
</TD>
<TD>H30</TD>
<TD>£18</TD>
</TR>
</TABLE>
A graphical user agent might render this as:
Note the use of the scope attribute with the "row" value. Although the
first cell in each row contains data, not header information, the scope
attribute makes the data cell behave like a row header cell. This allows speech
synthesizers to provide the relevant course name upon request or to state it
immediately before each cell's content.
Users browsing a table with a speech-based user agent may wish to hear an
explanation of a cell's contents in addition to the contents themselves. One
way the user might provide an explanation is by speaking associated header
information before speaking the data cell's contents (see the section on associating header information with data cells).
Users may also want information about more than one cell, in which case
header information provided at the cell level (by
headers, scope, and abbr) may not provide adequate context.
Consider the following table, which classifies expenses for meals, hotels, and
transport in two locations (San Jose and Seattle) over several days:
Users might want to extract information from the table in the form of
queries:
"What did I spend for all my meals?"
"What did I spend for meals on 25 August?"
"What did I spend for all expenses in San Jose?"
Each query involves a computation by the user agent that may involve zero or
more cells. In order to determine, for example, the costs of meals on 25
August, the user agent must know which table cells refer to "Meals" (all of
them) and which refer to "Dates" (specifically, 25 August), and find the
intersection of the two sets.
To accommodate this type of query, the HTML 4 table model allows authors to
place cell headers and data into categories. For example, for the travel
expense table, an author could group the header cells "San Jose" and "Seattle"
into the category "Location", the headers "Meals", "Hotels", and "Transport" in
the category "Expenses", and the four days into the category "Date". The
previous three questions would then have the following meanings:
"What did I spend for all my meals?" means "What are all the data cells in
the "Expenses=Meals" category?
"What did I spend for meals on 25 August?" means "What are all the data
cells in the "Expenses=Meals" and "Date=Aug-25-1997" categories?
"What did I spend for all expenses in San Jose?" means "What are all the
data cells in the "Expenses=Meals, Hotels, Transport" and "Location=San Jose"
categories?
Authors categorize a header or data cell by setting the axis
attribute for the cell. For instance, in the travel expense table, the cell
containing the information "San Jose" could be placed in the "Location"
category as follows:
<TH id="a6" axis="location">San Jose</TH>
Any cell containing information related to "San Jose" should refer to this
header cell via either the headers or the scope attribute. Thus, meal
expenses for 25-Aug-1997 should be marked up to refer to id
attribute (whose value here is "a6") of the "San Jose" header cell:
<TD headers="a6">37.74</TD>
Each
headers attribute provides a list of id references. Authors may thus
categorize a given cell in any number of ways (or, along any number of
"headers", hence the name).
Below we mark up the travel expense table with category information:
Note that marking up the table this way also allows user agents to avoid
confusing the user with unwanted information. For instance, if a speech
synthesizer were to speak all of the figures in the "Meals" column of this
table in response to the query "What were all my meal expenses?", a user would
not be able to distinguish a day's expenses from subtotals or totals. By
carefully categorizing cell data, authors allow user agents to make important
semantic distinctions when rendering.
Of course, there is no limit to how authors may categorize information in a
table. In the travel expense table, for example, we could add the additional
categories "subtotals" and "totals".
This specification does not require user agents to handle information
provided by the axis attribute, nor does it make any recommendations about
how user agents may present axis information to users or how users may query
the user agent about this information.
However, user agents, particularly speech
synthesizers, may want to factor out information common to several
cells that are the result of a query. For instance, if the user asks "What did
I spend for meals in San Jose?", the user agent would first determine the cells
in question (25-Aug-1997: 37.74, 26-Aug-1997:27.28), then render this
information. A user agent speaking this information might read it:
Location: San Jose. Date: 25-Aug-1997. Expenses, Meals: 37.74
Location: San Jose. Date: 26-Aug-1997. Expenses, Meals: 27.28
or, more compactly:
San Jose, 25-Aug-1997, Meals: 37.74
San Jose, 26-Aug-1997, Meals: 27.28
An even more economical rendering would factor the common information and
reorder it:
San Jose, Meals, 25-Aug-1997: 37.74
26-Aug-1997: 27.28
User agents that support this type of rendering should allow user agents a
means to customize rendering (e.g., through style sheets).
In the absence of header information from either the scope or
headers attribute, user agents may construct header information
according to the following algorithm. The goal of the algorithm is to find an
ordered list of headers. (In the following description of the algorithm the table directionality is assumed to be
left-to-right.)
First, search left from the cell's position to find row header cells. Then
search upwards to find column header cells. The search in a given direction
stops when the edge of the table is reached or when a data cell is found after
a header cell.
Row headers are inserted into the list in the order they appear in the
table. For left-to-right tables, headers are inserted from left to right.
Column headers are inserted after row headers, in the order they appear in
the table, from top to bottom.
If a header cell has the headers attribute set, then the headers
referenced by this attribute are inserted into the list and the search stops
for the current direction.
TD cells that set the axis attribute are also treated as
header cells.
This sample illustrates grouped rows and columns. The example is adapted
from "Developing International Software", by Nadine Kano.
In "ascii art", the following table:
<TABLE border="2" frame="hsides" rules="groups"
summary="Code page support in different versions
of MS Windows.">
<CAPTION>CODE-PAGE SUPPORT IN MICROSOFT WINDOWS</CAPTION>
<COLGROUP align="center">
<COLGROUP align="left">
<COLGROUP align="center" span="2">
<COLGROUP align="center" span="3">
<THEAD valign="top">
<TR>
<TH>Code-Page<BR>ID
<TH>Name
<TH>ACP
<TH>OEMCP
<TH>Windows<BR>NT 3.1
<TH>Windows<BR>NT 3.51
<TH>Windows<BR>95
<TBODY>
<TR><TD>1200<TD>Unicode (BMP of ISO/IEC-10646)<TD><TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>*
<TR><TD>1250<TD>Windows 3.1 Eastern European<TD>X<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>1251<TD>Windows 3.1 Cyrillic<TD>X<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>1252<TD>Windows 3.1 US (ANSI)<TD>X<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>1253<TD>Windows 3.1 Greek<TD>X<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>1254<TD>Windows 3.1 Turkish<TD>X<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>1255<TD>Hebrew<TD>X<TD><TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>1256<TD>Arabic<TD>X<TD><TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>1257<TD>Baltic<TD>X<TD><TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>1361<TD>Korean (Johab)<TD>X<TD><TD><TD>**<TD>X
<TBODY>
<TR><TD>437<TD>MS-DOS United States<TD><TD>X<TD>X<TD>X<TD>X
<TR><TD>708<TD>Arabic (ASMO 708)<TD><TD>X<TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>709<TD>Arabic (ASMO 449+, BCON V4)<TD><TD>X<TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>710<TD>Arabic (Transparent Arabic)<TD><TD>X<TD><TD><TD>X
<TR><TD>720<TD>Arabic (Transparent ASMO)<TD><TD>X<TD><TD><TD>X
</TABLE>
would be rendered something like this:
CODE-PAGE SUPPORT IN MICROSOFT WINDOWS
===============================================================================
Code-Page | Name | ACP OEMCP | Windows Windows Windows
ID | | | NT 3.1 NT 3.51 95
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1200 | Unicode (BMP of ISO 10646) | | X X *
1250 | Windows 3.1 Eastern European | X | X X X
1251 | Windows 3.1 Cyrillic | X | X X X
1252 | Windows 3.1 US (ANSI) | X | X X X
1253 | Windows 3.1 Greek | X | X X X
1254 | Windows 3.1 Turkish | X | X X X
1255 | Hebrew | X | X
1256 | Arabic | X | X
1257 | Baltic | X | X
1361 | Korean (Johab) | X | ** X
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
437 | MS-DOS United States | X | X X X
708 | Arabic (ASMO 708) | X | X
709 | Arabic (ASMO 449+, BCON V4) | X | X
710 | Arabic (Transparent Arabic) | X | X
720 | Arabic (Transparent ASMO) | X | X
===============================================================================
A graphical user agent might render this as:
This example illustrates how COLGROUP can be used to group columns
and set the default column alignment. Similarly, TBODY is
used to group rows. The frame and rules attributes tell the user agent
which borders and rules to render.