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Topic: How are uniform table columns achieved for posts on this forum? (Read 595 times)

legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
Are the [table] tags really that hard to use? Use [table] and [/table] to define a table, use [tr] and [/tr] to define rows within the table, and [td] and [/td] to define cells within each row.

SymbolStone TypeColorLocationHardness (1-9)
GACor8GraniteAmethystCornwall8
MNM3MarbleNadeshikoMarrawah3
FUNelB5FlutestoneUbeNel Bato5
BTC1BitshireTuscanyCaldik1
STB7SatoshimiteTransparentBièvre7
GXaXaH9GraniteXanaduXanadu Hills9
BFRS4BeiberliteFalu RedStatferd4

See? It's easy!
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
You mean like with the code button? Forum may support a font with equal spacing, too, which would keep you from having to use the crippling {code} option.

Code:
@Party       | Men  | Women   | Average Offspring
Walnut Grove | 30   | 5       | 2
Peanut Road  | 20   | 8       | 5

Like the above, or with a specific font you suggested, but which font? Anybody?

Thanks, Kluge.

BTW, the following is what I was trying to accomplish:

legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
He's asking if there's a way to do it inside a post, not how to do it as a web developer.
I guess I don't understand the question, then. Is there a way to not do that? The [table] tags do it automatically. Huh
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1015
You mean like with the code button? Forum may support a font with equal spacing, too, which would keep you from having to use the crippling {code} option.

Code:
@Party       | Men  | Women   | Average Offspring
Walnut Grove | 30   | 5       | 2
Peanut Road  | 20   | 8       | 5
legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1004
Keep it real
Seriously? This is Web Design 101. It's done by specifying relative widths (ie, a percentage of available space) instead of absolute widths (ie, number of pixels). For example, the column containing your avatar, post count, etc. has a width of 16% of the total table width, regardless of how wide the table actually ends up being on your screen, so it automatically scales with different resolutions.

He's asking if there's a way to do it inside a post, not how to do it as a web developer.
legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
Seriously? This is Web Design 101. It's done by specifying relative widths (ie, a percentage of available space) instead of absolute widths (ie, number of pixels). For example, the column containing your avatar, post count, etc. has a width of 16% of the total table width, regardless of how wide the table actually ends up being on your screen, so it automatically scales with different resolutions.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
If I see a couple examples, I'm sure I could reproduce in via seeing the code when I click the quote button. I know I've seen such posted here before, but would be hard-pressed to hunt them down, hence asking.

Each column would be titled and stay aligned with its intended column text regardless of resolution or other unknowns.

Thanks in advance, all.

~TMIBTCITW
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