Html Studio - HTML, CSS, Script reference.
HTML Elements


COL - Table Column


The COL element defines attributes common to a table column. If used, COL must be after the optional CAPTION and before the optional THEAD in the TABLE. Unlike COLGROUP, COL does not group columns structurally; it merely defines attributes common to all cells in one or more columns.

COL's SPAN attribute defines the number of columns that will share the COL element's other attributes; the default value is 1. COL may be contained directly in the TABLE element or it may be contained within a COLGROUP. If COL is in a COLGROUP, the COL's attributes override those of the COLGROUP for the columns spanned by COL.

The next example uses COL elements within COLGROUPs to assign a different CLASS to each column:

<TABLE SUMMARY="This table gives the character entity reference,
                decimal character reference, and hexadecimal character
                reference for 8-bit Latin-1 characters, as well as the
                rendering of each in your browser.">
  <COLGROUP CLASS="character-description">
  <COLGROUP>
    <COL CLASS=entity>
    <COL SPAN=2 CLASS=numeric>
  <COLGROUP>
    <COL CLASS="entity-rendering">
    <COL CLASS="decimal-rendering">
    <COL CLASS="hex-rendering">
  <THEAD>
    <TR>
      <TH SCOPE=col ROWSPAN=2>Character</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=col ROWSPAN=2>Entity</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=col ROWSPAN=2>Decimal</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=col ROWSPAN=2>Hex</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=colgroup COLSPAN=3>Rendering in Your Browser</TH>
    </TR>
    <TR>
      <TH SCOPE=col>Entity</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=col>Decimal</TH>
      <TH SCOPE=col>Hex</TH>
    </TR>
  </THEAD>
  <TBODY>
    <TR>
      <TD SCOPE=row>non-breaking space</TD>
      <TD>&amp;nbsp;</TD>
      <TD>&amp;#160;</TD>
      <TD>&amp;#xA0;</TD>
      <TD>&nbsp;</TD>
      <TD>&#160;</TD>
      <TD>&#xA0;</TD>
    </TR>
    ...
  </TBODY>
</TABLE>

COL also takes a number of presentational attributes, many of which cannot be completely replaced by style sheets. Since few browsers support COL, authors may wish to specify these attributes on the TD or TH elements instead.

The WIDTH attribute specifies a width for each column spanned by COL. The value must be a number in pixels, a percentage of the table width, or a relative length expressed as i* where i is an integer. A column with WIDTH="3*" will be allotted three times the width of a column with WIDTH="1*". The value 0* is equivalent to the minimum width necessary for the column's contents.

The ALIGN attribute specifies the horizontal alignment for each cell in the spanned columns. Possible values are left, center, right, justify, and char. ALIGN=char aligns a cell's contents on the character given in the CHAR attribute. The default value for the CHAR attribute is the decimal point of the current language--a period in English. The CHAROFF attribute specifies the offset to the first occurrence of the alignment character. The attribute's value is a number in pixels or a percentage of the cell's width; CHAROFF="50%" centers the alignment character horizontally in a cell.

The VALIGN attribute specifies the vertical position of a cell's contents. Possible values are:

  • top, which positions data at the top of the cell;
  • middle, the default value, which centers the cell data vertically;
  • bottom, which positions data at the bottom of the cell;
  • baseline, which specifies that the first line of each cell in the row with ALIGN=baseline should occur on a common baseline.

Maintained by Nick Grant < htmlstudio@talk21.com >


Copyright © 2000 Nick Grant. All Rights Reserved.