Multimarkdown Tables
You can use Multimarkdown syntax for tables. The following shows a sample:
Result:
| Priority apples | Second priority | Third priority |
|---|---|---|
| ambrosia | gala | red delicious |
| pink lady | jazz | macintosh |
| honeycrisp | granny smith | fuji |
<br/><br/>.HTML Tables
If you need a more sophisticated table syntax, use HTML syntax for the table. Although you’re using HTML, you can use Markdown inside the table cells by adding markdown="span" as an attribute for the td tag, as shown in the following table. You can also control the column widths.
Result:
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| First column fields | Some descriptive text. This is a markdown link to Google. Or see some link. |
| Second column fields | Some more descriptive text. |
jQuery DataTables
You also have the option of using a jQuery DataTable, which gives you some additional capabilities. To use a jQuery DataTable in a page, include datatable: true in a page’s frontmatter. This tells the default layout to load the necessary CSS and javascript bits and to include a $(document).ready() function that initializes the DataTables library.
You can change the options used to initialize the DataTables library by editing the call to $('table.display').DataTable() in the default layout. The available options for Datatables are described in the DataTable documentation, which is excellent.
You also must add a class of display to your tables. You can change the class, but then you’ll need to change the trigger defined in the $(document).ready() function in the default layout from table.display to the class you prefer.
You can also add page-specific triggers (by copying the <script></script> block from the default layout into the page) and classes, which lets you use different options on different tables.
If you use an HTML table, adding class="display" to the <table> tag is sufficient.
Markdown, however, doesn’t allow you to add classes to tables, so you’ll need to use a trick: add <div class="datatable-begin"></div> before the table and <div class="datatable-end"></div> after the table. The default layout includes a jQuery snippet that automagically adds the display class to any table it finds between those two markers. So you can start with this (we’ve trimmed the descriptions for display):
and get this:
Notice a few features:
- You can keyword search the table. When you type a word, the table filters to match your word.
- You can sort the column order.
- You can page the results so that you show only a certain number of values on the first page and then require users to click next to see more entries.
Read more of the DataTable documentation to get a sense of the options you can configure. You should probably only use DataTables when you have long, massive tables full of information.