<display-internal>
Some layout models such as table and ruby have a complex internal structure, with several different roles that their children and descendants can fill. This page defines those "internal" display values, which only have meaning within that particular layout mode.
Syntax
Valid <display-internal> values:
table-row-group-
These elements behave like
<tbody>HTML elements. table-header-group-
These elements behave like
<thead>HTML elements. -
These elements behave like
<tfoot>HTML elements. table-row-
These elements behave like
<tr>HTML elements. table-cell-
These elements behave like
<td>HTML elements. table-column-group-
These elements behave like
<colgroup>HTML elements. table-column-
These elements behave like
<col>HTML elements. table-caption-
These elements behave like
<caption>HTML elements. ruby-base-
These elements behave like
<rb>HTML elements. ruby-text-
These elements behave like
<rt>HTML elements. ruby-base-container-
These elements are generated as anonymous boxes.
ruby-text-container-
These elements behave like
<rtc>HTML elements.
Formal syntax
<display-internal> =
table-row-group |
table-header-group |
table-footer-group |
table-row |
table-cell |
table-column-group |
table-column |
table-caption |
ruby-base |
ruby-text |
ruby-base-container |
ruby-text-container
Examples
>CSS tables example
The following example demonstrates laying out a form using CSS table layout.
HTML
<main>
<div>
<label for="name">Name</label>
<input type="text" id="name" name="name" />
</div>
<div>
<label for="age">Age</label>
<input type="text" id="age" name="age" />
</div>
</main>
CSS
main {
display: table;
}
div {
display: table-row;
}
label,
input {
display: table-cell;
margin: 5px;
}