http://www.usability.com.au/resources/tables.cfm is a great resource.
I find particularly interesting
http://www.usability.com.au/resources/tables.cfm#very , as it
demonstrates that "accessible" tables needn't be meagre and can, in
fact, contain quite a lot of structured information. It sounds as
though you're trying to structure multiple levels of information
(multiple fees for each item?), and even that isn't beyond what we
can/should use tables for.

Tables don't kill people, people kill people... Or something. :P
(Heck, tables don't even help!)

Josh

On 1/4/06, Lea de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 04/01/2006, at 6:29 PM, Vicki Berry wrote:
> > With a bit of fiddling I can put a whole list in one table row and
> > get the prices to align (might work as long as everyone views in
> > the same sized browser window so there is no wrapping! Ha!) but
> > then I lose the association between each item and its fee - or
> > don't I? Is there another way to do this (using ids perhaps?) where
> > I can achieve what I need to do? I can't simply put each item and
> > price in its own table row, because then I can't keep the list.
>
> Can you show us an example of what you have so far? It does sound
> like it should be a table, IMHO.
>
> Lea
> --
> Lea de Groot
> Elysian Systems - http://elysiansystems.com/
> Brisbane, Australia
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