In an HTML table, the cellpadding
and cellspacing
can be set like this:
<table cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1">
How can the same be accomplished using CSS?
width:auto
then border-collapse
might not work as expected.
cellpadding
and cellspacing
... what is that in CSS again?" –me, pretty much every time I need to do this.
Basics
For controlling "cellpadding" in CSS, you can simply use padding
on table cells. E.g. for 10px of "cellpadding":
td {
padding: 10px;
}
For "cellspacing", you can apply the border-spacing
CSS property to your table. E.g. for 10px of "cellspacing":
table {
border-spacing: 10px;
border-collapse: separate;
}
This property will even allow separate horizontal and vertical spacing, something you couldn't do with old-school "cellspacing".
Issues in IE ≤ 7
This will work in almost all popular browsers except for Internet Explorer up through Internet Explorer 7, where you're almost out of luck. I say "almost" because these browsers still support the border-collapse
property, which merges the borders of adjoining table cells. If you're trying to eliminate cellspacing (that is, cellspacing="0"
) then border-collapse:collapse
should have the same effect: no space between table cells. This support is buggy, though, as it does not override an existing cellspacing
HTML attribute on the table element.
In short: for non-Internet Explorer 5-7 browsers, border-spacing
handles you. For Internet Explorer, if your situation is just right (you want 0 cellspacing and your table doesn't have it defined already), you can use border-collapse:collapse
.
table {
border-spacing: 0;
border-collapse: collapse;
}
Note: For a great overview of CSS properties that one can apply to tables and for which browsers, see this fantastic Quirksmode page.
Default
The default behavior of the browser is equivalent to:
table {border-collapse: collapse;}
td {padding: 0px;}
https://i.stack.imgur.com/cukle.png
Cellpadding
Sets the amount of space between the contents of the cell and the cell wall
table {border-collapse: collapse;}
td {padding: 6px;}
https://i.stack.imgur.com/c0ght.png
Cellspacing
Controls the space between table cells
table {border-spacing: 2px;}
td {padding: 0px;}
https://i.stack.imgur.com/WNuBP.png
Both
table {border-spacing: 2px;}
td {padding: 6px;}
https://i.stack.imgur.com/eyZQl.png
Both (special)
table {border-spacing: 8px 2px;}
td {padding: 6px;}
https://i.stack.imgur.com/gbJ3T.png
Note: If there is border-spacing set, it indicates border-collapse property of the table is separate.
Here you can find the old HTML way of achieving this.
border-spacing:horizontal vertical;
whereas, for example, padding:vertical horizontal;
.
table
{
border-collapse: collapse; /* 'cellspacing' equivalent */
}
table td, table th
{
padding: 0; /* 'cellpadding' equivalent */
}
cellspacing=0
equivalent. The equivalent for cellspacing=1
is completely different. See the accepted answer.
Setting margins on table cells doesn't really have any effect as far as I know. The true CSS equivalent for cellspacing
is border-spacing
- but it doesn't work in Internet Explorer.
You can use border-collapse: collapse
to reliably set cell spacing to 0 as mentioned, but for any other value I think the only cross-browser way is to keep using the cellspacing
attribute.
border-collapse
only works in IE 5-7 if the table doesn't already have a cellspacing
attribute defined. I've written a comprehensive answer that merges all the correct parts of the other answers on this page in case that's helpful.
This hack works for Internet Explorer 6 and later, Google Chrome, Firefox, and Opera:
table {
border-collapse: separate;
border-spacing: 10px; /* cellspacing */
*border-collapse: expression('separate', cellSpacing = '10px');
}
table td, table th {
padding: 10px; /* cellpadding */
}
The *
declaration is for Internet Explorer 6 and 7, and other browsers will properly ignore it.
expression('separate', cellSpacing = '10px')
returns 'separate'
, but both statements are run, as in JavaScript you can pass more arguments than expected and all of them will be evaluated.
For those who want a non-zero cellspacing value, the following CSS worked for me, but I'm only able to test it in Firefox.
See the Quirksmode link posted elsewhere for compatibility details. It seems it may not work with older Internet Explorer versions.
table {
border-collapse: separate;
border-spacing: 2px;
}
The simple solution to this problem is:
table
{
border: 1px solid #000000;
border-collapse: collapse;
border-spacing: 0px;
}
table td
{
padding: 8px 8px;
}
Also, if you want cellspacing="0"
, don't forget to add border-collapse: collapse
in your table
's stylesheet.
Wrap the contents of the cell with a div and you can do anything you want, but you have to wrap every cell in a column to get a uniform effect. For example, to just get wider left & right margins:
So the CSS will be,
div.cellwidener { margin: 0px 15px 0px 15px; } td.tight { padding: 0px; }
My content
|
Yes, it's a hassle. Yes, it works with Internet Explorer. In fact, I've only tested this with Internet Explorer, because that's all we're allowed to use at work.
This style is for full reset for tables - cellpadding, cellspacing and borders.
I had this style in my reset.css file:
table{
border:0; /* Replace border */
border-spacing: 0px; /* Replace cellspacing */
border-collapse: collapse; /* Patch for Internet Explorer 6 and Internet Explorer 7 */
}
table td{
padding: 0px; /* Replace cellpadding */
}
TBH. For all the fannying around with CSS you might as well just use cellpadding="0"
cellspacing="0"
since they are not deprecated...
Anyone else suggesting margins on <td>
's obviously has not tried this.
Simply use CSS padding rules with table data:
td {
padding: 20px;
}
And for border spacing:
table {
border-spacing: 1px;
border-collapse: collapse;
}
However, it can create problems in older version of browsers like Internet Explorer because of the diff implementation of the box model.
From what I understand from the W3C classifications is that <table>
s are meant for displaying data 'only'.
Based on that I found it a lot easier to create a <div>
with the backgrounds and all that and have a table with data floating over it using position: absolute;
and background: transparent;
...
It works on Chrome, Internet Explorer (6 and later) and Mozilla Firefox (2 and later).
Margins are used (or meant anyways) to create a spacer between container elements, like <table>
, <div>
and <form>
, not <tr>
, <td>
, <span>
or <input>
. Using it for anything other than container elements will keep you busy adjusting your website for future browser updates.
CSS:
selector{
padding:0 0 10px 0; // Top left bottom right
}
You can easily set padding inside the table cells using the CSS padding property. It is a valid way to produce the same effect as the table's cellpadding attribute.
table, th, td { border: 1px solid #666; } table th, table td { padding: 10px; /* Apply cell padding */ }
Row | First Name | Last Name | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Clark | Kent | clarkkent@mail.com |
2 | Peter | Parker | peterparker@mail.com |
3 | John | Rambo | johnrambo@mail.com |
Similarly, you can use the CSS border-spacing property to apply the spacing between adjacent table cell borders like the cellspacing attribute. However, in order to work border-spacing the value of border-collapse property muse be separate, which is default.
table { border-collapse: separate; border-spacing: 10px; /* Apply cell spacing */ } table, th, td { border: 1px solid #666; } table th, table td { padding: 5px; /* Apply cell padding */ }
Row | First Name | Last Name | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Clark | Kent | clarkkent@mail.com |
2 | Peter | Parker | peterparker@mail.com |
3 | John | Rambo | johnrambo@mail.com |
Try this:
table {
border-collapse: separate;
border-spacing: 10px;
}
table td, table th {
padding: 10px;
}
Or try this:
table {
border-collapse: collapse;
}
table td, table th {
padding: 10px;
}
I used !important
after the border-collapse like
border-collapse: collapse !important;
and it works for me in IE7. It seems to override the cellspacing attribute.
!important
would only be needed to override other CSS settings in a complex situation (and even then mostly a wrong approach).
td {
padding: npx; /* For cellpadding */
margin: npx; /* For cellspacing */
border-collapse: collapse; /* For showing borders in a better shape. */
}
If margin
didn't work, try to set display
of tr
to block
and then margin will work.
Say that we want to assign a 10px "cellpadding" and a 15px "cellspacing" to our table, in a HTML5-compliant way. I will show here two methods giving really similar outputs.
Two different sets of CSS properties apply to the same HTML markup for the table, but with opposite concepts:
the first one uses the default value for border-collapse (separate) and uses border-spacing to provide the cellspacing,
the second one switches border-collapse to collapse and uses the border property as the cellspacing.
In both cases, the cellpadding is achieved by assigning padding:10px
to the td
s and, in both cases, the background-color
assigned to them is only for the sake of a clearer demo.
First method:
table{border-spacing:15px} td{background-color:#00eb55;padding:10px;border:0}
Header 1 | Header 2 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
Second method:
table{border-collapse:collapse} td{background-color:#00eb55;padding:10px;border:15px solid #fff}
Header 1 | Header 2 |
1 | 2 |
3 | 4 |
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