It looks like (according to the examples on this page, anyways) that if you're using THEAD, you don't need to use TH.
Is that true? If so, what are the advantages/disadvantages of THEAD vs TH?
It looks like (according to the examples on this page, anyways) that if you're using THEAD, you don't need to use TH.
Is that true? If so, what are the advantages/disadvantages of THEAD vs TH?
The <thead>
tag is used to group the header content in an HTML table.
The thead
element should be used in conjunction with the tbody
and tfoot
elements.
More: thead
Using the words of Marc Seyon:
You use
<thead>
to encapsulate an entire row (or rows) to designate them as the Table Header.[...]
According to the spec, "This division enables user agents to support scrolling of table bodies independently of the table head and foot. When long tables are printed, the table head and foot information may be repeated on each page that contains table data."
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/struct/tables.html#h-11.2.3
<th>
, on the other hand, is used to style a specific cell as a header cell rather than an ordinary data cell.
thead
was last updated but a month ago, making it (at the very least) a more trustworthy resource.
<th>
actually is a replacement for <td>
when you want to mark a cell as a header cell.
If you want to use <thead>
and <th>
don't forget to nest <th>
inside <tr>
. Otherwise the code may not be valid.
Example:
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<!-- scope="col" is optional if the th is inside a thead -->
<th scope="col">Season</th>
<th scope="col">Goals</th>
<th scope="col">Assists</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<!-- scope="row" indicates that the th is a header for that row -->
<th scope="row">2009-2010</th>
<td>25</td>
<td>43</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">2011-2012</th>
<td>40</td>
<td>20</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
th
can be used inside a thead
and also inside a tbody
, both elements are useful in their own context." that answers the question... Gerald is just being picky about the way you wrote the answer, but it is in fact the only answer here that provided a meaningful example.
Commented
Aug 10, 2016 at 16:32
th
gets bolded by default, without extra CSS, thanks for that!
Commented
Aug 10, 2016 at 16:39
th
is more specific than what may reside inside of thead
. A th
cell is to specify the header of the corresponding td
cells. In fact you can add a headers
attribute to a td
cell which points to the id of a th
cell (for screen readers). So th
is directly related to the td
s of that column.
However, thead
can include any information...commonly yes it does include the th
cells but it can also include anything that you might deem to be appropriate as information at the top of the table (other than a caption, because this has its own tag as well).
<thead>
is special in that it can be used to repeat the header row at the top of the page in printed versions.
<thead>
Table rows may be grouped into a table head, table foot, and one or more table body sections, using the THEAD
, TFOOT
and TBODY
elements, respectively. This division enables user agents to support scrolling of table bodies independently of the table head and foot. When long tables are printed, the table head and foot information may be repeated on each page that contains table data.
The table head and table foot should contain information about the table's columns. The table body should contain rows of table data.
When present, each THEAD, TFOOT, and TBODY contains a row group. Each row group must contain at least one row, defined by the TR element.
<th>
Table cells may contain two types of information: header information and data. This distinction enables user agents to render header and data cells distinctly, even in the absence of style sheets. For example, visual user agents may present header cell text with a bold font. Speech synthesizers may render header information with a distinct voice inflection.
The TH element defines a cell that contains header information. User agents have two pieces of header information available: the contents of the TH element and the value of the abbr attribute. User agents must render either the contents of the cell or the value of the abbr attribute. For visual media, the latter may be appropriate when there is insufficient space to render the full contents of the cell. For non-visual media abbr may be used as an abbreviation for table headers when these are rendered along with the contents of the cells to which they apply.
As far as I can tell from experience, there is no difference in rendering unless you're using CSS to specify a difference in rendering. A <td>
inside of a <thead>
will render the same as a <th>
inside of a <table>
or a <tbody>
.
<td>
inside of a <thead>
renders the same as a <th>
, not that a <tr>
does.
There are no hard rules here. The <thead>
element is just another way to group your columns and rows, just like <tbody>
and <tfoot>
is. So you have more possibilities for scripting and formatting.
thead
withoutth
. There are some examples that only show thetr
element within thethead
, but it's to be understood (from the rest of the spec) that a row (tr
) doesn't exist by itself—it contains a bunch of cells (th
ortd
). The...
is there to show you that some code is missing! Still, it's a fair question: isthead > tr > td
valid? I'd argue that it's just as semantic to givetd
header status when it's a descendant ofthead
, but then I didn't write the spec.