16

I'd like to use a <tfoot> tag in a table to be semantically correct, but it keeps showing up at the the top of my table. Is there a way to tell it to display at the bottom?

3
  • 2
    Please post your entire <table> block Jan 13, 2010 at 2:10
  • 2
    Note that the answers don't mention the fact that in HTML 4.01, putting the tfoot after any tbody in the source was an error. (It's only since HTML5 that this is formally allowed.) That's the reason many HTML editors rearrange the table so that the tfoot is on top.
    – Mr Lister
    Apr 19, 2014 at 11:18
  • 1
    Have you forgotten the <tr> or <td> in <tfoot>? Oct 10, 2014 at 6:00

5 Answers 5

22

As others have said, tfoot is defined before the tbody but rendered afterwards. This is by design and doesn't change the semantics (a table has a head, a foot and a body - the order of these doesn't matter)

The reason it's done this way is so that the foot can be loaded and displayed on screen while the body is still downloading, so you can still read the summary information you have in the foot. It's virtually moot these days, but with a slow connection and a massive table, you might still see the benefits.

5
  • Ain't it annoying when standards don't make sense. "ACBDEFG..." Jan 13, 2010 at 23:15
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    +1 For explaining the reason why the tfoot tag should be above the tbody tag.
    – 3urdoch
    Jul 5, 2013 at 9:16
  • Pity we can't place it like the footer tag, there could be valid reasons to have it visually positioned elsewhere but hey-ho.
    – Ric
    Feb 4, 2015 at 15:29
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    Screenreaders benefit from this as well. Visually impaired people don't have to read the full table before reading the footer, which in most cases contains more relevant content than a random cell.
    – Ruudt
    May 13, 2015 at 7:40
  • 1
    I prefer to put tfoot after tbody, otherwise when you click & drag to select the text it jumps around.
    – rybo111
    Jan 30, 2016 at 13:42
17

According to the specification, you may place the tfoot before, or after, the tbody element(s). See the following description from the previous link.

Contexts in which this element can be used:

  1. As a child of a table element, after any caption, colgroup, and thead elements and before any tbody and tr elements, but only if there are no other tfoot elements that are children of the table element.

  2. As a child of a table element, after any caption, colgroup, thead, tbody, and tr elements, but only if there are no other tfoot elements that are children of the table element.

Regardless of where you place the markup, the footer information will be displayed at the bottom visually.

2
  • The name tfoot is misleading I think. That might be what caused the confusion.
    – Sampson
    Jan 13, 2010 at 2:16
  • it's not misleading at all - it's the footer for the table. the problem is just assuming that you have to define it in a certain place
    – nickf
    Jan 14, 2010 at 1:40
17

The <tfoot> can show on top of the whole <table> if the contents of the <tfoot> are not in <tr> and <td> tags and respectively - not in the table.

1
  • Thanks, this is what got me.
    – remi90
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:03
4

Your table should look like the following:

<table>
    <thead>...</thead>
    <tfoot>...</tfoot>
    <tbody>...</tbody>
</table>

with tfoot appearing above tbody. It will render, though, at the bottom of the table

2
0

I am aware that this question was asked a while ago but I thought that I would add my experience of tfoot to the comments already made. When I added CSS "display:block" to the tfoot element, it appeared between thead and tbody, not at the bottom. When display:block was removed, it displayed correctly. I wasted some time working this one out, so I hope my answer will help someone else to save time and aggravation!

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