Avaya 4600 Series Administrator's Manual page 98

Table of Contents

Advertisement

4600 Series IP Telephone LAN Administrator's Guide
Lists
<ol> starts an ordered list. This provides a list with some type of numbering: upper-case
letters, lower-case letters, digits, upper-case roman numerals, lower-case roman numerals.
Setting the type attribute is ignored in the browser.
<ul> starts an unordered list. This provides a list with bullets to the left of each item.
<li> adds an item to an ordered or unordered list.
<dl> starts a definition list. This is a list with two fields per list item. The first is a term and the
second is the term's definition.
<dt> adds a new definition term to a definition list.
<dd> adds a new term definition to a definition list.
Tables
The new HTML 4.0 table tags, <thead>, <tbody> and <tfoot> are all implemented. These tags are
intended primarily to allow printed pages to have headers and footers appear on each page, when
the table is longer than a single page. Since the 4630 IP Telephone Web Browser does not provide
the ability to print, it is recommended that these tags not be used.
<table> starts a table layout.
<caption> adds a caption to a table. The align attribute allows a caption to be placed above or
below the table. This attribute has no effect in the phone.
<tr> adds a new table row to a table.
<th> adds a header for some column(s) of a table.
<td> adds a piece of data for some row(s) and column(s) of a table.
<thead> defines a set of table header rows. The intent of this tag is to provide a set of header
rows for each printed page. While viewing the page in a browser, the header has no more
effect than the <th> tag. What it does provide for the designer is a more logical breakout of the
data. It is easy to recognize the header area of the table since it is set between the <thead>
start and end tags.
<tbody> defines the main body of a table, when used in conjunction with the <thead> and
<tfoot> tags.
<tfoot> defines a footer for a table. This tag may contain multiple rows. Like the <thead> tag,
the intent of this tag is to provide a set of footer rows for each printed page. Viewing the page
in a browser has no additional effect. And like the <thead> tag, this tag provides a logical
breakout of the data for the designer.
<colgroup> defines a column group. It may be used as a single definition of identical columns
or as a container for dissimilar columns. The span attribute defines what columns are parts of
each group.
<col> controls the appearance of one or more columns within a column group.
Browser Features and Behavior
B-6
5
5

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents