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I was looking for some resources about the use of CSS instead of tables and reached this presentation by Douglas Bowman that seems to be a 'classic'. I dug into it and found this sentence about the tables in the slide 6 that is very intriguing:

Keep the cellspacing attribute in the markup.

It's curious that in Eric Meyer's reset CSS is:

/* tables still need 'cellspacing="0"' in the markup */
table {
    border-collapse: separate;
    border-spacing: 0;
}

These makes me think having cellspacing in the mark up is really a best practice I didn't know. In my opinion the cellspacing is more about the presentation than about the semantics of the info. I've been thinking for a while but haven't been able to figure out why should I keep it in the HTML?

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1 Answer 1

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You can set border-collapse: collapse on all browsers. But other values for border-collapse and the border-spacing property are not supported before IE8.

Personally, I've never found a reason to use anything other than border-collapse: collapse - separated borders on tables usually look pretty awful.

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  • +1: the way to go. Just get rid of cellspacing=0 and use table { border-collapse: collapse; } instead.
    – BalusC
    Nov 21, 2009 at 3:33
  • Yes I'm aware of border-collapse. I'm just wondering why would somebody use cellspacing markup attribute Nov 21, 2009 at 4:23
  • Well I guess what he means is that if you want cellspacing, the only reliable way to do it (back then, anyway) is to use the attribute, not CSS. Nov 23, 2009 at 12:44

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