From 07e4a2dafe248280b5610f8c7d09b0f30b530f54 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bradley Taunt Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2024 09:41:25 -0400 Subject: Initial modifications to rebuilt only changed files based on mod date, performance updates --- posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md | 16 ++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md') diff --git a/posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md b/posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md index b64928d..ef2e810 100644 --- a/posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md +++ b/posts/Please_Make_Your_Table_Headings_Sticky.md @@ -4,7 +4,14 @@ I often stumble upon large data sets or table layouts across the web. When these tables contain hundreds of rows of content, things become problematic once you start to scroll... -[Link to video example of standard table header](/public/videos/not-fixed-header-tables.mp4) + + + + +

This should be a header

Look at that table header disappear! Now, if I scroll all the way down to item #300 (for example) will I remember what each column's data is associated with? If this is my first time looking at this table - probably not. Luckily we can fix this (no pun intended!) with a tiny amount of CSS. @@ -12,7 +19,12 @@ Look at that table header disappear! Now, if I scroll all the way down to item # Check it out: -[Link to video example of fixed table header](/public/videos/fixed-header-tables.mp4) + + + Pretty awesome, right? It might look like magic but it's actually very easy to implement. You only need to add 2 CSS properties on your `thead`: -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf