On 10/27/2003 3:11 PM, "Dimitre Novatchev" <dnovatchev(_at_)yahoo(_dot_)com>
wrote in
whole or in part:
Would this be a problem -- 3 <td>'s in <tr> 1 & 2 and 2 <td>'s in the
remainder of the <tr>'s? Shouldn't there always be the same number of
columns or have a 'colspan' in there?
I didn't see any requirements in
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/struct/tables.html", but have seen the
browsers
go really wonky when all is not right with the world!
This is not an XSLT-related question and I am not an HTML specialist.
Ah, but I thought there might be an XSLT clue on how to "pad-out" if the
columns don't fit neatly into the divisions. This could occur if you were
going across or down with a variable number of items, but a set number of
columns (or rows). The '</tr>' does not get written until the columns are
equal in the row.
I suppose I'd use the parameter in your example ("pcolSize") and force an
empty result until the columns are correct.
However, one could find the answer to such a question more directly by
simply viewing the output with the major browsers.
With IE6 and Mozilla the answer is:
No, this is not a problem.
Thanks,
Beverly
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