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Overview
This page outlines an example of how to style table columns using the CSV macro, Table Plus macro, Attachment Table macro, or JSON Table Macro, which are part of the Advanced Tables for Confluence add-on.
Since release 5.4, there are more capabilities to control table display characteristics. Specifically, setting the table class (default is confluenceTable), table style, and row styles. See Common Table Capabilities for more details.
Since release 6.4, there is now another option for column styling with the columnStyles parameter. It defines column level CSS at the HTML column level where as the columnAttributes parameter works at the element level and provides more than CSS styling capabilities. columnStyles can be easier to use and is recommended for most use cases. However, it does not cover every use case that is available with the columnAttributes parameter.
Macro Browser Input
Select this Macro
Macro Name | Any of the following:
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Macro Syntax | Any of the following:
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Define these Parameters/Values
Each column can be styled by setting the style attribute. For example setting the columnAttributes parameter to:
style="border:0;background:lightgrey;",style="border:0;background:lightyellow;",style="border:0;background:lightgreen;" |
Screenshot
Wiki Markup Input
For a table built using the CSV macro:
{csv:columnAttributes=style="border:0;background:lightgrey;",style="border:0;background:lightyellow;",style="border:0;background:lightgreen;"} Heading 1,Heading 2,Heading 3 A1,A2,A3 B1,B2,B3 {csv}
Example Result
Styling guide
The table styling shown in this example utilizes the common table capabilities of several Bob Swift Atlassian add-ons including Advanced Tables for Confluence, SQL for Confluence, and others.
For creative inspiration when styling your own Confluence Tables (including live examples) visit our Styling Guide for Tables.
Other Examples
Visit our full list of product examples for additional inspiration!