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The <tfoot> tag
Definition and Usage
Defines a table footer.
The thead, tfoot and tbody elements enables you to group rows in a table.
When you create a table, you might want to have a header row, some rows with
data, and a row with totals at bottom. This division enables browsers to support
scrolling of table bodies independently of the table header and footer. When
long tables are printed, the table header and footer information may be repeated
on each page that contains table data.
Tips and Notes
Note: If you use the thead, tfoot and tbody elements, you must use every element,
but you can leave them blank They should appear in this order: <thead>, <tfoot>
and <tbody>, so that browsers can render the foot before receiving all the data.
You must use these tags within the table element.
Note: The <thead>,<tbody> and <tfoot> elements are
seldom used, because of bad browser support. Expect this to change in future
versions of XHTML. If you have Internet Explorer 5.0 or newer, you can view a
working
example in our XML tutorial.
Examples
This code: |
Produces this output: |
<table border = "1">
<thead>
<tr>
<td>This text is in the THEAD</td>
</tr>
</thead>
<tfoot>
<tr>
<td>This text is in the TFOOT</td>
</tr>
</tfoot>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>This text is in the TBODY</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table> |
This text is in the THEAD |
This text is in the TFOOT |
This text is in the TBODY |
|
Optional Attributes
Attributes: |
Values: |
Description: |
align |
right
left
center
justify
char |
Alignment of the text in the cells |
char |
character |
Sets which character to be used to center the text around, when you set
align="char" |
charoff |
pixels
% |
Specifies an offset that must be used when you have set
align="char". This offset is added to the position where the
character to center around is |
valign |
top
middle
bottom
baseline |
Vertical alignment of the text in the cells |
Standard Attributes
id, class, title, style, dir, lang |
For a full description, go to Standard
Attributes.
Event Attributes
onclick, ondblclick, onmousedown, onmouseup, onmouseover, onmousemove, onmouseout, onkeypress, onkeydown, onkeyup
|
For a full description, go to Event Attributes.
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