On Wed, June 14, 2006 3:28 pm, BBC wrote:
> I used many functions as template to change the html syntax.
> this is one of the function as a sample:
> <?php
> function
> tabletag($border="0",$width="100%",$height="100%",$cellpadding =
> "0",$cellspacing="0",$style="")
> {
> print ("<table width=\"$width\" height =\"$height\"
> border=\"$border\"
> cellspacing=\"$cellspacing\" cellpadding=\"$cellpadding\"
> style=\"$style\">");
> }
> ?>
Here are the 'cons' to this solution:
1.
The developer has to remember the attributes in the order you chose.
There is no friggin' way I'm going to remember that you put
cellpadding before cellspacing on a day-to-day basis. Sorry.
2.
If they want the default border, whatever that is, they have to know
what it is, and provide it, to get the non-default width.
Passing in NULL does not count, as it will not work in PHP5+
3.
You've basically swapped a simple table tag:
<table border="0" width="100%" ... >
with an almost equally long and complicated function call:
tabletag(0, '100%', ...);
So, really, where's the benefit?...
You can just call the function, or you can just type the table tag.
I see no "win' here, personally.
Obviously others do see an added value, of course.
> so I don't need to type "<table ....>", just call those functions.
> and I don't think it works slowly (cause we just set one function for
> many
> tables)
If you have enough TABLE tags for the performance to be an issue, then
the browser willl choke...
However, assuming you have a function for TR and/or TD, then the
number of rows in a large TABLE could be a serious performance issue.
This is all assuming proper use of TABLE for tabular data and not
layout, thank you very much CSS weenies :-)
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