664
votes

It seems to be the general opinion that tables should not be used for layout in HTML.

Why?

I have never (or rarely to be honest) seen good arguments for this. The usual answers are:

  • It's good to separate content from layout
    But this is a fallacious argument; Cliche Thinking. I guess it's true that using the table element for layout has little to do with tabular data. So what? Does my boss care? Do my users care?

    Perhaps me or my fellow developers who have to maintain a web page care... Is a table less maintainable? I think using a table is easier than using divs and CSS.

    By the way... why is using a div or a span good separation of content from layout and a table not? Getting a good layout with only divs often requires a lot of nested divs.

  • Readability of the code
    I think it's the other way around. Most people understand HTML, few understand CSS.

  • It's better for SEO not to use tables
    Why? Can anybody show some evidence that it is? Or a statement from Google that tables are discouraged from an SEO perspective?

  • Tables are slower.
    An extra tbody element has to be inserted. This is peanuts for modern web browsers. Show me some benchmarks where the use of a table significantly slows down a page.

  • A layout overhaul is easier without tables, see css Zen Garden.
    Most web sites that need an upgrade need new content (HTML) as well. Scenarios where a new version of a web site only needs a new CSS file are not very likely. Zen Garden is a nice web site, but a bit theoretical. Not to mention its misuse of CSS.

I am really interested in good arguments to use divs + CSS instead of tables.

8
  • Agreed, tables are fine when presenting tabular data. They should be avoided when using it purely for layout. Then again, sometimes, you have to take the easy road now and improve it later. Just view source and you'll see what I mean.
    – Haacked
    Sep 17, 2008 at 16:07
  • There is a duplicate Q and A at stackoverflow.com/questions/30251/tables-instead-of-divs Sep 17, 2008 at 18:30
  • 11
    The answer is simple: it depends. If tables are used to solve a specific problem that current CSS versions can't, they are well used. If you start getting tables inside tables, inside millions of tables then you're doing it wrong. If it's the ocasional table just to layout some 2 columns or something like that, I don't disallow it on my team: it's faster and easier to do it. (Myself, I always try to use CSS, but at the end of the day, delivery is more important than correct semantic HTML)
    – AlfaTeK
    Jan 21, 2010 at 14:48
  • 1
    @Camilo SO still lives in the 20th century. Jeff apparently does not know how to use the ul tag. Have a look at all of the lists on this site (badges, related questions, recent tags). They're all either single columns or long paragraphs separated with br.
    – Yi Jiang
    Sep 20, 2010 at 12:50
  • 2
    @Brad: Depending on some specific details (that's my get out for any clever comebacks ;-) that usage of DIVs is STILL better than abusing tables. Two parts of a document that happen to be laid out alongside each other can legitimately be contained in DIV elements, but they're certainly NOT tabular data. It doesn't matter what one specific styling happens to be; the content is either tabular or not. Note: I am NOT advocating DIVitis either :)
    – Bobby Jack
    Nov 1, 2010 at 18:20

66 Answers 66

3
votes

DOM Manipulation is difficult in a table-based layout.

With semantic divs:

$('#myawesomediv').click(function(){
    // Do awesome stuff
});

With tables:

$('table tr td table tr td table tr td.......').click(function(){
    // Cry self to sleep at night
});

Now, granted, the second example is kind of stupid, and you can always apply IDs or classes to a table or td element, but that would be adding semantic value, which is what table proponents so vehemently oppose.

1
  • Whoever said that table proponent oppose semantic value? The only thing table proponents like about using table for layout is that it is fast and easy to write, it's easy to generate, and it never breaks. No matter the browser or the window size, you know that you will never have a cell pushed down below or above something else.
    – Sylverdrag
    Apr 11, 2011 at 6:56
2
votes

A huge issue for me is that tables, especially nested tables, take much longer to render than a properly layed out css implementation. (You can make css just as slow).

All browsers render the css faster because each div is a seperate element, so a screen can be loading as the user is reading. (For huge data sets, etc). I've used css instead of tables in that instance not even dealing with layout.

A nested table (tables inside of cells, etc) will not render to the browser window until the last "/table" is found. Even worse - a poorly defined table will somtimes not even render! Or when it does, things misbehave. (not colspanning properly with "TD"'s etc.)

I use tables for most things, but when it comes to large data and the desire to have a screen render quickly for an end-user - I try my best to utilize what CSS has to offer.

2
votes

One example: you want to center the main content area of a page, but in order to contain the floats inside it, it needs to be floated. There is no "float: center" in CSS.

That is not the only way to "contain the floats" inside a centred element. So, not a good argument at all!

In a way, it's a false premise, the "divs vs tables" thing.

Quick-and-dirty division of a page into three columns? Tables are easier, to be honest. But no professional uses them any more for layout, because they lock the positioning of page elements into the page.

The real argument is "positioning done by CSS (hopefully in a remote file)" as opposed to "positioning done by HTML in the page". Surely everyone can see the benefits of the former as opposed to the latter?

  1. Size -- if your page layout is in the HTML, in the pages, it can't be cached, and it has to be repeated on every page. You will save enormous amounts of bandwidth if your layout is in a cached CSS file, not in the page.
  2. Multiple developers can work on the same page at the same time -- I work on the HTML, other guy works on the CSS. No repository needed, no problems with over-writing, file locking etc.
  3. Making changes is easier -- there will be problems with layout in different browsers, but you only have to fix one file, the CSS file, to sort them out.
  4. Accessibility, as mentioned a lot previously. Tables assume a two-dimensional layout works for everyone. That's not how some users view your content and it's not how Google views your content.

Consider this:

[ picture ] [ picture ] [ picture ]
[ caption ] [ caption ] [ caption ]

which represents two rows of a table with 6 cells. Someone who can see the 2-D table layout will see a caption under each picture. But using speech synthesis, or a PDA, and for a search engine spider, that's

picture picture picture caption caption caption

and the relationship, which is obvious with the table in place, disappears.

Are DIVs and CSS better for the task of simply laying out rectangles on an HTML page to achieve a given design in the shortest possible time? No, they're probably not. But I'm not in the business of quickly laying out rectangles to achieve a given design. I'm thinking of a much bigger picture.

2
votes

I've had to do sites in both of those ways, plus a third, the dreaded "hybrid" layout with tables, divs and styles: Divs/CSS wins, handily.

You'd have to nest divs three deep to match the code weight of just one table cell, right off the bat. That effect scales with nested tables.

I'd also prefer to make one layout change, vs one change for every page in my site.

I have full control over every aspect of presentation with divs/css. Tables mess that up in hideous ways, especially in IE, a browser which I have never yet had the option not to support.

My time for maintenance or redesign of a divs/css website is a fraction of what it would be in tables.

Finally, I can innovate multiple, switchable layouts with CSS and virtually any scripting language. That would be impossible for me with tables.

Good luck with your ROI as you make that decision.

2
votes

The separation between content and layout makes it also easier to generate printer-friendly layouts or just different skins (styles) for your site, without having to create different html-files. Some browser (like Firefox) even support selecting a stylesheet from the view-menu.

And I do think it's easier to maintain a tableless layout. You don't have to worry about rowspans, colspans, etc. You just create some container-divs and place the content where you need to. And that said I think it also more readable (<div id="sidebar"> vs <tr><td>...</td><td>...<td>sidebar</td></tr>).

It's just a little 'trick' you have to learn (and once you mastered the trick, I think it's easier and makes more sense).

2
votes

The issue of strictly separating presentation and content strikes me as roughly analogous to separating header files from implementation files in C++. It makes sense, but it can also be a pain. Witness Java and C# where classes are defined in a single source file. The authors of the newer languages noticed something that was causing programmers headaches and they got rid of it. That seems to be the gist of this discussion. One side is saying CSS is too difficult, the other side is saying one must become a CSS master.

For simple layout issues why not bend the rule that says presentation must be completely separate? What about a new tag (or some extension to the div tag) that allows us to control presentation directly in HTML? After all, aren't we already leaking presentation into HTML? Look at h1, h2...h6. We all know these control presentation.

The ability to read code (and HTML is code) is very important. Gurus tend to overlook how important it is to make a programming environment as accessible to the masses as possible. It is very shortsighted to think that only professional programmers matter.

2
votes
  1. Try to merge/split a 10/20 something deep colspan/rowspan. More than once I had to supress my instinct to start a fight with someone. [?!]
  2. Try to change source code order without changing visible order. [SEO, usability, ...]
  3. The very (really simple) page we're looking at is ~150K. I bet It can nearly be halved using proper CSS. [SEO (Yes, SEO, read latest Google specs etc), perfo, ...]
  4. Try to make an iterator template that can work in any width.
  5. The discussion of the matter in this table-based medium of SO can cause a singularity and destroy us all
1
vote

Tables are good for HTML that you're throwing together for something simple or temporary. If you're building a large-scale website, you should go with divs and CSS, since it will be easier to maintain over time as your website changes.

1
vote

To respond to the "tables are slower" argument - you're thinking rendering time, which is the wrong metric. Very often, developers will write out a huge table to do the entire layout for a page - which adds significantly to the size of the page to be downloaded. Like it or not, there's still a ton of dialup users out there.

See also: overusing ViewState

1
vote

I once learned that a table loads at once, in other words when a connection is slow, the space where the table comes remains blank until the entire table is loaded, a div on the other hand loads top to bottom as fast as the data comes and regardless if it is allready complete or not.

2
  • 1
    That would have been about 15 years ago? Nov 11, 2009 at 23:30
  • @Tom Hawtin - tackline:In my country we still have the problem.so +1.
    – Behrooz
    Apr 30, 2010 at 4:55
1
vote

I do believe this is an issue connected to a general problem. When HTML was born no one could foresee its widespread use. Another technology which almost collapsed under the weight of its own success. When HTML pages were written in vi on a green text terminal a TABLE was all that was needed to present data to the visitors of the page, and it mostly was data that made sense in a tabular form.

We all know how things evolved. TABLEs went out of fashion comparatively recently, but there are lots of reasons to prefer DIVs and CSS based layouts (accessibility not the last of them). Of course I can't write a CSS to save my life :-) and I think a graphical design expert should always be at hand.

That said... there are lots of data that should be presented in a table even in a modern web site.

1
vote

Use tables when you need to ensure that elements need to remain in a specific physical relationship in the layout. For data, the table is generally the best layout element to use because you do not want your columns to wrap in an uxexpected ways and confuse the associations.

One could also argue that non-data elements that must remain in a specific relationship should also be rendered in a table.

Flexible css layouts are great for content that is suitable for mobile devices and large screens and printing and other display types, but sometimes, the content just has to be displayed in a very specific way and if that requires that screen readers cannot easily access it, it could very well be justified.

1
  • ”One could also argue that non-data elements that must remain in a specific relationship should also be rendered in a table.” Such data simply has no place in HTML. You need to understand your medium. Sep 17, 2008 at 16:24
1
vote

I try to avoid TABLEs as much as possible, but when we are designing complex forms that mix multiple control types and different caption positions with pretty strict controls on grouping, using DIVs is unreliable or often near impossible.

Now, I will not argue that these forms could not be redesigned to better accommodate a DIV based layout, but for some of them our customer is adamant about not changing the existing layouts from the previous version (written in classic ASP) because it parallels a paper form that their users are familiar with.

Because the presentation of the forms is dynamic (where the display of some sections is based on the state of the case or the permissions of the user), we use sets of stacked DIVs, each containing a TABLE of logically grouped form elements. Each column of the TABLE is classed so that they can be controlled by CSS. That way we can turn off different sections of the form without the problem of not being table to wrap rows in DIVs.

1
vote

From past experience, I'd have to go for DIV's. Even in OOP, the main aim is to reduce the coupling between objects, so this concept can be applied to DIVS and tables. Tables are used for holding data, not for arranging it around a page. A DIV is specifically designed to arrange items around a page, so the design should use DIV's, tables should be used to store data.

Also, editting websites made with tables is just plain hard (in my opinion)

1
vote

I think nobody cares how a website was designed/implemented when it behaves great and it works fast.

I use both "table" and "div"/"span" tags in HTML markup.

Let me give you few arguments why I am choosing divs:

  1. for a table you have to write at least 3 tags (table, tr, td, thead, tbody), for a nice design, sometimes you have a lot of nested tables

  2. I like to have components on the page. I don't know how to explain exactly but will try. Suppose you need a logo and this have to be placed, just a small piece of it, over the next page content. Using tables you have to cut 2 images and put this into 2 different TDs. Using DIVs you can have a simple CSS to arange it as you want. Which solution do you like best?

  3. when more then 3 nested tables for doing something I am thinking to redesign it using DIVs

BUT I am still using tables for:

  1. tabular data

  2. content that is expanding self

  3. fast solutions (prototypes), because DIVs box model is different on each browser, because many generators are using tables, etc

1
vote

In the past, screen readers and other accessibility software had a difficult time handling tables in an efficient fashion. To some extent, this became handled in screen readers by the reader switching between a "table" mode and a "layout" mode based on what it saw inside the table. This was often wrong, and so the users had to manually switch the mode when navigating through tables. In any case, the large, often highly nested tables were, and to a large extent, are still very difficult to navigate through using a screen reader.

The same is true when divs or other block-level elements are used to recreate tables and are highly nested. The purpose of divs is to be used as a fomating and layout element, and as such, are intended used to hold similar information, and lay it out on the screen for visual users. When a screen reader encounters a page, it often ignores any layout information, both CSS based, as well as html attribute based(This isn't true for all screen readers, but for the most popular ones, like JAWS, Windows Eyes, and Orca for Linux it is).

To this end, tabular data, that is to say data that makes logical sense to be ordered in two or more dimensions, with some sort of headers, is best placed in tables, and use divs to manage the layout of content on the page. (another way to think of what "tabular data" is is to try to draw it in graph form...if you can't, it likely is not best represented in a table)

Finally, with a table-based layout, in order to achieve a fine-grained control of the position of elements on the page, highly nested tables are often used. This has two effects: 1.) Increased code size for each page - Since navigation and common structure is often done with the tables, the same code is sent over the network for each request, whereas a div/css based layout pulls the css file over once, and then uses less wordy divs. 2.) Highly nested tables take much longer for the client's browser to render, leading to slightly slower load times.

In both cases, the increase in "last mile" bandwidth, as well as much faster personal computers mitigates these factors, but none-the-less, they still are existing issues for many sites.

With all of this in mind, as others have said, tables are easier, because they are more grid-oriented, allowing for less thought. If the site in question is not expected to be around long, or will not be maintained, it might make sense to do what is easiest, because it might be the most cost effective. However, if the anticipated userbase might include a substantial portion of handicapped individuals, or if the site will be maintained by others for a long time, spending the time up front to do things in a concise, accessible way may payoff more in the end.

1
vote

1: Yes, your users do care. If they use a screen reader, it will be lost. If I use any other tool which tries to extract information from the page, encountering tables that aren't used to represent tabular data is misleading.

A div or span is acceptable for separating content because that is precisely the meaning of those elements. When I, a search engine, a screen reader or anything else, encounter a table element, we expect that this means "the following is tabular data, represented in a table". When we encounter a div, we expect "this is an element used to divide my content into separate parts or areas.

2: Readability: Wrong. If all the presentation code is in css, I can read the html and I'll understand the content of the page. Or I can read the css and understand the presentation. If everything is jumbled together in the html, I have to mentally strike out all the presentation-related bits before I can even see what is content and what isn't. Moreover, I'd be scared to meet a web developer who didn't understand css, so I really don't think that is an issue.

3: Tables are slower: Yes, they are. The reason is simple: Tables have to be parsed completely, including their contents before they can be rendered. A div can be rendered when it is encountered, even before its contents have been parsed. That means divs will show up before the page has finished loading.

And then there's the bonus, that tables are much more fragile, and won't always be rendered the same in different browsers, with different fonts and font sizes and all the other factors that can cause layout to vary. Tables are an excellent way to ensure that your site will be off by a pixel or two in certain browsers, won't scale well when the user changes his font size, or changes his settings in any other way.

Of course #1 is the big one. A lot of tools and applications depend on the semantic meaning of a webpage. The usual example is screen-readers for visually impaired users. If you're a web developer, you'll find that many large companies who may otherwise hire you to work on a site, require that the site is accessible even in this case. Which means you have to think about the semantic meaning of your html. With the semantic web, or more relevantly, microformats, rss readers and other tools, your page content is no longer viewed exclusively through a browser.

1
vote

I'm sorry for my English but here's another reason :

I worked in some governmental organization and the number one reason to not use TABLE, is for disabled peoples. They use machines to "translate" web pages.

The problem is this "translation machine" can't read the website if it's done by TABLE. Why ? Because TABLE are for DATAS.

in fact, if you use TABLES, for each CELLS you have to specify some informations to let disabled people to know where they are in the TABLE. Imagine you have a big table and have to zoom to see only 1 cell in the screen : you have to know in which line/col you are.

So, DIV are used, and the disabled can simply read text, and don't get some weird informations about lines/cols when they don't have to be there.

I also prefer TABLE to make quick and easy templates, but I'm now used to CSS... it's powerful, but you really have to know what you are doing... :)

1
vote

I researched the issue of screen readers and tables a few years ago and came up with information that contradicts what most developers believe:

http://www.webaim.org/techniques/tables/

"You will probably hear some accessibility advocates say that layout tables are a bad idea, and that CSS layout techniques ought to be used instead. There is truth in what they say, but, to be honest, using tables for layout is not the worst thing that you could do in terms of accessibility. People with all kinds of disabilities can easily access tables, as long as the tables are designed with accessibility in mind. "

1
vote

If you're supporting the table angle on this find a site with tables and then get yourself a screenreader - set off the screen reader and turn off your monitor.

Then try it with a nice semantically correct div layout site.

You'll see the difference.

Tables aren't evil if the data in them is tabular not to layout the page.

1
vote

Google gives very low priority to text content contained inside a table. I was giving some SEO advice to a local charity. In examining their website it was using tables to layout the site. Looking at each page, no matter what words - or combination of words - from their pages I used in the Google search box the pages would not come up in any of the top search pages. (However, by specifying the site in the search the page was returned.) One page was well copy written by normal standards to produce a good result in a search but still it didn't appear in any of the first pages of search results returned. (Note this text was within a table.) I then spotted a section of text on the pages which was in a div rather than a table. We put a few of the words from that div in the search engine. Result? It came in at No.2 in the search result.

1
vote

div's and CSS positioning allow a more flexible design, leading to easier modification and templating of your web pages.

That said, if you aren't interested in the flexibility then using a table rather than some divs that are morphed into a table by CSS is definitely a lot easier and quicker to knock up. I tend to use tables when knocking up a design just to get it looking right that bit quicker.

1
vote

I still don't quite understand how divs / CSS make it easier to change a page design when you consider the amount of testing to ensure the changes work on all browsers, especially with all the hacks and so on. Its a hugely frustrating and tedious process which wastes large amounts of time and money. Thankfully the 508 legislation only applies to the USA (land of the free - yeah right) and so being as I am based in the UK, I can develop web sites in whatever style I choose. Contrary to popular (US) belief, legislation made in Washington doesn't apply to the rest of the world - thank goodness for that. It must have been a good day in the world of web design the day the legislation came into force. I think I'm becoming increasingly cynical as I get older with 25 years in the IT industry but I feel sure this kind of legislation is just to protect jobs. In reality anyone can knock together a reasonable web page with a couple of tables. It takes a lot more effort and knowledge to do this with DIVs / CSS. In my experience it can take hours and hours Googling to find solutions to quite simple problems and reading incomprehensible articles in forums full of idealistic zealots all argueing about the 'right' way to do things. You can't just dip your toe in the water and get things to work properly in every case. It also seems to me that the lack of a definitive guide to using DIVS / CSS "out of the box", that applies to all situations, working on browsers, and written using 'normal' language with no geek speak, also smells of a bit of protectionism.
I'm an application developer and I would say it takes almost twice as long to figure out layout problems and test against all browsers than it does to create the basic application, design and implement business objects, and create the database back end. My time = money, both for me and my customers alike so I am sorry if I don't reject all the pro DIV / CSS arguments in favour of cutting costs and providing value for money for my customers. Maybe its just the way that developers minds work, but it seems to me far easier to change a complex table structure than it is to modify DIVs / CSS. Thankfully it now appears that a solution to these issues is now available - its called WPF.

1
vote

Flex has a tag for laying things out in vertical columns. I don't think they got the whole layout/content thing right either to be honest, but at least they've resolved that issue.

Like many of the people frustrated with CSS I've also looked far and wide for an easy answer, was duped into feeling elated when I thought I had found it, and then had my hopes dashed to pieces when I opened the page in Chrome. I'm definitely not skilled enough to say it's not possible, but I haven't seen anyone offer up sample code for peer review proving unequivocally that it can be done reliably.

So can someone from the CSS side of this island recommend a mindset/methodology for laying out vertical columns? I've tried absolute positioning in second and third rows, but i end up with stuff overlapping everywhere and float has similar issues if the page is shrunk down.

If there was an answer to this I'd be ecstatic to -do the right thing- Just tell me something like, "Hey have you tried **flow:vertical|horizontal" and I'm totally out of your hair.

1
vote

As per my knowledge on tables, if too many tables are nested, there is a great overhead to browser in rendering the page.

1 - The browser has wait to render the final view wait until the entire table gets loaded.

2 - The algorithm to render the table is expensive and is not in a single go. The browser, as and when, gets the contents, will try to render calculating the content width and height. So, if you are having nested tables, say, the browser has received the first row and the 1st cell is having large amount of content and width and height not defined, it will calculate the width and will render the first row, In the mean while it gets the 2nd row will cell#2 having loads of content! It will now calculate the width for 2nd row cells.. What about the first ? It will calculate widths recursively. That's bad at client side. (To site an example) As a programmer, you'll optimize stuffs such as time to fetch data, optimized data structures and etc. You optimize things to complete on server side, say in2 secs, but end user in getting the final view in 8 secs. What is wrong here ? 1. May be network is slow! What if network is fine ? What is network is delivering the contents in next 1 sec ? Where is this extra 5 secs getting consumed ? Thing to worry about-- The browser might be taking lot of time in estimating and rendering the tables!

How to optimize tables ? If you're using tables, I would suggest, always define width for the cells. This does not guarantees that browser will blindly take this widths only, but would be of great help to browser in deciding the initial widths.

But, at the end, div are great way as CSS can be cached by the browser; while table aren't cached !

1
vote

By still using table for layouts, we are missing on the innovation on the div side.

Many have come up with solutions that make creating layout for divs easier. The most popular being the grid architecture. There are dynamic layout generators based on this architecture. Check out: 1) 960.gs and (http://grids.heroku.com/) 2) blueprint and so many of late.

I have not seen much of innovation in terms of architecture and tools with the tables layout.

I would say, all the theories aside, practically layout with CSS and divs are faster. Rather innovation in this direction made it easier than anything.

1
vote

When I design my layout using CSS, I generally give every major section its own root (body level) div, and use relative/absolute positioning to get it into its proper place. This is a bit more flexible than tables, as I'm not limited to an arrangement that I can represent using rows and columns.

Furthermore, if I decide that I want to rearrange the layout (say I want the navigation bar to be on the right now) I can simply go and alter the position for the elements in one place (the CSS file) and the HTML doesn't have to change. If I were doing that with tables, I would have to go in and find the information and do a lot of attribute modding and copying and pasting to get the same effect.

In fact, using CSS, I can even have my users select how they want their layout to work. So long as the general size of the content areas doesn't change, I'm perfectly OK with using a bit of PHP scripting to output my CSS based on user preferences, and allowing them to rearrange the site to their own liking. Once again, possible with tables, but much much harder to maintain.

Finally, CSS allows one MAJOR benefit that tables will never provide: the ability to reformat content based on the display device. CSS allows me to use a completely different style set (including position, formatting, etc) for a printer than the one I use for the monitor. This can be extended to other media as well, an excellent example is Opera Show, which allows a cleverly designed (and very standard) CSS enhanced page to be viewed as a slide show.

So in the end, flexibility and management are the real winners. Generally, CSS allows you to do more with the layout. There's nothing technically nonstandard about a table based layout, but why would you want to limit yourself?

0
votes

Tables used as pure layout does pose some problems for accessability (that I've heard). But I understand what is being asked here that somehow you're crippling the web by using a table to ensure correct alignment of something on your page.

I've heard people argue before that FORM labels and inputs are, in fact, data and that they should be allowed into tables.

The argument that using a table to make sure a few elements line up correctly causes this massive increase in code tend to include examples of how a single DIV can meet all their needs. They don't always include the 10 lines of CSS and special browser hacks they had to write for IE5,IE5.5,IE6,IE7...

I think it remains about using balance in your design. Tables are in the toolbox, just remember what they are for...

0
votes

Surely the OP was a bit of a wind up, the arguments seem so week and easily countered.

Web pages are the domain of web developers, and if they say div & CSS is better than tables that's good enough for me.

If a layout is achieved by tables generated by a server app, then a new layout means changes to the app, a rebuild and redelpoy of the application, as apposed to just changes to a css file.

Plus, accessibility. Tables used for layout make a website inaccessible, so don't use them. It's a no brainer, not to mention illegal.

0
votes

Using DIV, you can easily switch things. For example, you could make this :

Menu | Content

Content | Menu

Menu
----
Content

It's easy to change it in CSS, not in HTML. You can also provide several styles (right handed, left handed, special for little screen).

In CSS, you can also hide the menu in a special stylesheet used for printing.

Another good thing, is that your content is always in the same order in the code (the menu first, the content after) even if visually it's presented otherwise.

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