Tables, tables, tables! Together with images, HTML tables are the black sheep of web design.
Regardless of being the black sheep, the power of tables is amazing. And if there's an HTML element that does its job well, very well, it's tables.
Let's dig in.
The
table-layout
CSS property allows us to define the how HTML tables are laid out on the document, and it looks like this:
table-layout: fixed;
There are two keyword values: auto
and fixed
.
auto
: This is the default value. Tables are automatically laid out by the browser this way without declaring anything in the CSS. The table cells adapt to the content inside of them; the behavior of table can sometimes be unpredictable.fixed
: By declaring the width of the table cells from the first row, the rendering of the entire table can be actually faster; anything we do to improve performance is big win for everyone.Since the table cells have a fixed width, depending on the data in the cells, some information can overflow the cells. Using a combination of the overflow
properties and text-overflow: ellipsis;
we can fix the issue.
CSS:
table { table-layout: fixed; }
The
border-collapse
CSS property tells the table cells to stay separated or get close together (collapse), and it looks like this:
border-collapse: collapse;
This property supports two keyword values: separate
and collapse
.
separate
: This is the default value. There is a space between the table cells, and each cell has its own border.collapse
: This value brings the cells together, thus the space is lost and the cells share borders.CSS:
table { border-collapse: collapse; }
The
border-spacing
CSS property creates a space between the table cells, and it looks like this:
border-spacing: 10px;
The
empty-cells
CSS property allows us to define how browsers should render borders and backgrounds on cells that have no content in them, and it looks like this:
empty-cells: hide;
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