Original question: Does HTML <table>
have a default width?
Recently someone asked a question somewhere along these lines, and got me wondering.
Take this for example.
In this fiddle, if you were to check its width (I'm using inspect element from chrome), it shows 100px
, working as intended.
Lets add a few more "td"s in, and we shall see that the "td:100px
" css is being ignored.
As you can see, now it's 83px instead of 100px
as originally intended.
But let's say, I move back to fewer TD's (7), and I add in a wider width to each TD element (500px), the result is that the width of the td gets stuck at 119px
.
And finally, let's say I have a table of 2000px width, and td of 100px
width, and many td elements.
http://jsfiddle.net/rqmNY/7/
Now the table width overrides the TD width, and expands the td's width to 222px
.
Can anyone explain this behavior?
p.s. Note that in all cases, inspect element tool tells me that the width is always corresponding to the css, it's just the final result not showing correctly.
I highly believe the answer to this question is such:
The priority of widths that will affect the TD is
Table Width
Parent Element Width (and if none, Viewport)
Element(TD) Width.
Hence if the table width is set, the TD's will ALWAYS adjust to the width of the table. However, if the width is unset, the "main" width will be the true width of the viewport. Unless the CSS code states otherwise, this holds true. And only when the total width of the TD's is smaller than that of the viewport, the elemental width will be taken into account.
Edit
Table width will always override TD width.
Stated TD width will only be followed until it exceeds viewport width, and viewport width will be taken as priority.