The following steps describe what you need to do to complete the table example. All the data
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The following steps describe what you need to do to complete the table example. All the data you'll need is contained in the planets-data.txt file. If you have trouble visualizing the data, look at the live example above, or try drawing a diagram.
- Open your copy of blank-template.html, and start the table off by giving it an outer container, a table header, and a table body. You don't need a table footer for this example.
- Add the provided caption to your table.
- Add a row to the table header containing all the column headers.
- Create all the content rows inside the table body, remembering to make all the row headings into headings semantically.
- Ensure all the content is placed into the right cells in the raw data, each row of planet data is shown next to its associated planet.
- Add attributes to make the row and column headers unambiguously associated with the rows, columns, or rowgroups that they act as headings for.
- Add a black border just around the column that contains all the planet name row headers.The first cell of the header row needs to be blank, and span two columns.
- The group row headings (e.g. Jovian planets) that sit to the left of the planet name row headings (e.g. Saturn) are a little tricky to sort out you need to make sure each one spans the correct number of rows and columns.
- One way of associating headers with their rows/columns is a lot easier than the other way.
Related Book For
Measurement Theory In Action
ISBN: 9780367192181
3rd Edition
Authors: Kenneth S Shultz, David Whitney, Michael J Zickar
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