Revision: 8300
Updated Code
at September 11, 2008 17:54 by demixo
Updated Code
/* Don't do it the intuitive way... */ <table> <tr style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;"> <td>Row 1</td> <td>Row 2</td> <td>Row 3</td> </tr> </table> /* ...because it doesn't work in IE6 or Safari, even if you set the <td> background element to 'transparent' or 'none'. But you can still make it happen with just the one image: */ <table> <tr> <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;">Row 1</td> <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 50% 0;">Row 2</td> <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 100% 0;">Row 3</td> </tr> </table> /* You're just altering the background-position of the image, so that what should be on the left goes on the left (at 0), the middle part goes to the middle (50% horizontally), and the last part goes at the end (100%). Remember that values in the background-position element are ordered horizontal, then vertical, unlike the margin and padding elements. And, of course, you'll want to separate presentation from content by putting the CSS elsewhere and classing the td's. */
Revision: 8299
Updated Code
at September 11, 2008 17:53 by demixo
Updated Code
/* Don't do it the intuitive way... */ <table> �<tr style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;"> ��<td>Row 1</td> ��<td>Row 2</td> ��<td>Row 3</td> �</tr> </table> /* ...because it doesn't work in IE6 or Safari, even if you set the <td> background element to 'transparent' or 'none'. But you can still make it happen with just the one image: */ <table> �<tr> ��<td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;">Row 1</td> ��<td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 50% 0;">Row 2</td> ��<td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 100% 0;">Row 3</td> �</tr> </table> /* You're just altering the background-position of the image, so that what should be on the left goes on the left (at 0), the middle part goes to the middle (50% horizontally), and the last part goes at the end (100%). Remember that values in the background-position element are ordered horizontal, then vertical, unlike the margin and padding elements. And, of course, you'll want to separate presentation from content by putting the CSS elsewhere and classing the td's. */
Revision: 8298
Initial Code
Initial URL
Initial Description
Initial Title
Initial Tags
Initial Language
at September 11, 2008 17:52 by demixo
Initial Code
/* Don't do it the intuitive way... */ <table>  <tr style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;">   <td>Row 1</td>   <td>Row 2</td>   <td>Row 3</td>  </tr> </table> /* ...because it doesn't work in IE6 or Safari, even if you set the <td> background element to 'transparent' or 'none'. But you can still make it happen with just the one image: */ <table>  <tr>   <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 0 0;">Row 1</td>   <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 50% 0;">Row 2</td>   <td style="background: url(/images/tr-background.gif) no-repeat 100% 0;">Row 3</td>  </tr> </table> /* You're just altering the background-position of the image, so that what should be on the left goes on the left (at 0), the middle part goes to the middle (50% horizontally), and the last part goes at the end (100%). Remember that values in the background-position element are ordered horizontal, then vertical, unlike the margin and padding elements. And, of course, you'll want to separate presentation from content by putting the CSS elsewhere and classing the td's. */
Initial URL
http://www.plexusweb.com/staff/colin/blog/post/95/Need-a-background-image-on-a-table-row
Initial Description
Gracias a este artÃculo, pude colocar fondos de imagen a para las filas de una tabla.
Initial Title
background-image para las filas de una tabla
Initial Tags
css, html
Initial Language
XHTML