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What CSS should I use to make a cell's border appear even if the cell is empty?

IE 7 specifically.

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8 Answers

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If I recall, the cell dosn't exist in some IE's unless it's filled with something...

If you can put a   (non breaking space) to fill the void, that will usually work. Or do you require a pure css solution?

Apparently, IE8 shows the cells by default, and you have to hide it with empty-cells:hide But it doesn't work at all in IE7 (which hides by default)

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Pure CSS would be nice. I already have nbsps in there, but it feels dirty. :) – Allain Lalonde Sep 11 '08 at 16:13
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Another way of making sure there is data in all cells:

   $(document).ready(function() {
      $("td:empty").html("&nbsp ;");
    });
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"IE" isn't a useful term in this context anymore now that IE8 is out.

IE7 always does "empty-cells:show" (or so I'm told ... Vista). IE8 in any of its "Quirks" or "IE7 Standards" modes always does "empty-cells:hide". IE8 in "Standards" mode defaults to "empty-cells:show" and supports the attribute via CSS.

As far as I know, every other browser has correctly supported this for several years (I know it was added in Firefox 2).

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hi,allain

empty cells is nicely working in IE but not working in Firefox

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If you set the border-collapse property to collapse, IE7 will show empty cells. It also collapses the borders though so this might not be 100% what you want

CSS:

td { 
 border: 1px solid red; 
}
table {
 border-collapse: collapse;
}

Example HTML Document:

<html>
<head>
<title>Border-collapse Test</title>
<style type="text/css">
td { 
 border: 1px solid red; 
}
table {
 border-collapse: collapse;
}
</style>
</head>
</body>
<table>
<tr><td></td><td>test</td><td>test</td></tr>
<tr><td>test</td><td></td><td>test</td></tr>
<tr><td>test</td><td></td><td>test</td></tr>
<tr><td>test</td><td></td><td /></tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>
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I'm not sure this should be the accepted answer since, as the poster points out, it has other side-effects, which may well be undesirable. It's also not true, at least as far as I can verify. Can you post a link to a working example? – Bobby Jack Sep 14 '08 at 12:54
I've added an example HTML document that shows the border showing even on blank cells. Tested in IE7, fx3 and the latest safari. The main side-effect of border-collapse is you can't have double borders that look decent. Also, missing cells can't be styled no matter how hard you try – rpetrich Sep 15 '08 at 7:09
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Ideally, you shouldn't have any empty cells in a table. Either you have a table of data, and there's no data in that specific cell (which you should indicate with "-", or "n/a/", or something equally appropriate, or - if you must - &nbsp;, as suggested), or you have a cell that needs to span a column or row, or you're trying to achieve some layout with a table that you should be using CSS for.

Can we have a bit more detail?

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I like this. Clarity increases. – Allain Lalonde Sep 11 '08 at 16:38
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I just found the following. It's standards compliant but it doesn't work in IE. sigh.

empty-cells: show
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1  
It does work in IE8 though, so just give it about a decade, and you're good to go. – Grant Sep 11 '08 at 16:19
Amusingly it also works for an standard html <table> in IE6 but not an ASP.NET table :) – Rich Andrews Oct 15 at 9:17
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I guess this can't be done with CSS; You need to put a &nbsp; in every empty cell for the border to show in IE...

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