How to write tables

Start a table by writing <table>, and end it by writing </table>.

Rows are separated by writing <tr>, and each item in a row starts with <td>.

Here's an example:

<table>
<td>Row 1, column 1.
<td>Row 1, column 2.
<td>Row 1, column 3.
<td>Row 1, column 4.
<tr>
<td>Row 2, column 1.
<td>Row 2, column 2.
<td>Row 2, column 3.
<td>Row 2, column 4.
<tr>
<td>Row 3, column 1.
<td>Row 3, column 2.
<td>Row 3, column 3.
<td>Row 3, column 4.
<tr>
<td>Row 4, column 1.
<td>Row 4, column 2.
<td>Row 4, column 3.
<td>Row 4, column 4.
</table>

And here's what it looks like:

Row 1, column 1. Row 1, column 2. Row 1, column 3. Row 1, column 4.
Row 2, column 1. Row 2, column 2. Row 2, column 3. Row 2, column 4.
Row 3, column 1. Row 3, column 2. Row 3, column 3. Row 3, column 4.
Row 4, column 1. Row 4, column 2. Row 4, column 3. Row 4, column 4.

If you want to separate the table's header and body, you can add a split with thead and tbody, like this:

<table>
<thead>
<td>column 1.
<td>column 2.
<td>column 3.
<td>column 4.
<tbody>
<td>Row 1, column 1.
<td>Row 1, column 2.
<td>Row 1, column 3.
<td>Row 1, column 4.
<tr>
<td>Row 2, column 1.
<td>Row 2, column 2.
<td>Row 2, column 3.
<td>Row 2, column 4.
</table>

And here's what it looks like:

column 1. column 2. column 3. column 4.
Row 1, column 1. Row 1, column 2. Row 1, column 3. Row 1, column 4.
Row 2, column 1. Row 2, column 2. Row 2, column 3. Row 2, column 4.