Chapter 8: Working With Tables; About Conflicts In Table Formatting - Adobe 65015459 - Contribute CS4 User Manual

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Chapter 8: Working with Tables

A table is a powerful tool for presenting tabular data. For example, you might add a table to a web page that lists all
your sales reps in one column, with their contact information in another column.
In Adobe® Contribute® CS3, you can add text and images to table cells the same way that you add text and images to
a page (see "Working with Text" on page 85 and "Working with Images and Graphic Elements" on page 99). After
you create a table you can easily modify both its appearance and structure.
This chapter contains the following sections:

About conflicts in table formatting

When formatting tables, you can set properties for the entire table or for selected cells, rows, or columns in the table.
When a table property, such as background color or alignment, is set to one value for the entire table and another
value for individual cells, cell formatting takes precedence over row formatting, which in turn takes precedence over
table formatting.
The order of precedence for table formatting is as follows:
1
Cells
Rows
2
Table
3
For example, if you set the background color for a single cell to blue, and then set the background color of the entire
table to yellow, the blue cell does not change to yellow because cell formatting takes precedence over table formatting.
Note: When you set properties for a column, Contribute changes the attributes of the
in the column.
tag corresponding to each cell
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