- From: Krzysztof Żelechowski <giecrilj@stegny.2a.pl>
- Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2008 20:03:44 +0100
Dnia 23-03-2008, N o godzinie 19:29 +0000, Ian Hickson pisze: > Executive summary: > * header/id is in. > * summary="" is not in. > * axis="" is not in. > * the automatic header association algorithm has been expanded. > * a number of minor fixes and editorial edits were made. > > For details, see revisions r1373 to r1396. > > On Thu, 16 Aug 2007, Ben Boyle wrote: > > > > Look at the balance sheet (3rd table). It's like we have nested sections > > within the table. There's "net assets" that's broken down into "current > > assets", "non-current assets" and "liabilities", each either their own > > heading and totals (footer). > > > > It would be interesting to investigate table markup that could support > > complex relationships within tables like this. It may be a bit esoteric, > > and can probably be handled through classes for those that need it. In > > either case it's very important we can clearly associate the headers > > with the right cells. I think it would be useful to be able to identity > > the "totals" (footers?) in each section too. > > For simple cases like: > > WATER FOOD > CATS > male 871 12 > female 900 10 > TOTALS FOR CATS 1771 22 > DOGS > male 871 12 > female 900 10 > TOTALS FOR DOGS 1771 22 > TOTALS 3542 44 > > ...you can now easily get this effect by putting everything in the left > hand column into <th>s, everything on the top row into <th>s, and > everything on the bottom row into its own <tfoot>. > > Does that work? You are trying to map a cube onto a plane here. It will never work, except for the simplest cases the reader can easily imagine. More formally, your table has two independent attributes enumerated: table(species of {cats, dogs, all}, sex of {male, female, total}) and two dependent numerical ones: = (water, food) and should have the following four columns: species sex water food An alternative would be to use tabs to present slices of the cube for different animals --- but it is out of scope here, I presume. > > > > I'm going to through a crazy idea into the mix and suggest that > > <section>, <header> and <footer> may be useful within data tables for > > this very purpose. > > I'm not clear on how that would work. (Especially considering backwards > compatibility and the CSS table model.) > > > Aren't the two answers below contradictory? > On Tue, 14 Nov 2006, Simon Pieters wrote: > > > > Currently <tbody> requires at least one <tr> element. [1] Why not zero > > or more? I think <tr> is for <tbody> like <li> is for <ul>/<ol> (or a > > <dt><dd> group is for <dl>). > > Because if you have zero <tr> elements, you actually have zero <tbody> > elements, which is allowed. > > > On Thu, 5 Apr 2007, Simon Pieters wrote: > > > > Why does <tbody> require one or more <tr> elements, as opposed to zero > > or more? > > Fixed. > > Cheers, Chris
Received on Tuesday, 25 March 2008 12:03:44 UTC