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I am trying to design an HTML table where the header will stay at the top of the page when AND ONLY when the user scrolls it out of view. For example, the table may be 500 pixels down from the page, how do I make it so that if the user scrolls the header out of view (browser detects its no longer in the windows view somehow), it will stay put at the top? Anyone can give me a Javascript solution to this?

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Col1</th>
      <th>Col2</th>
      <th>Col3</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
     <tr>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
     </tr>
     <tr>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
     </tr>
     <tr>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
       <td>info</td>
     </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

So in the above example, I want the <thead> to scroll with the page if it goes out of view.

IMPORTANT: I am NOT looking for a solution where the <tbody> will have a scrollbar (overflow:auto).

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1  
duplicate? stackoverflow.com/questions/1030043 – Brad Tofel Jul 19 '12 at 18:20

5 Answers

up vote 32 down vote accepted

You would do something like this by tapping into the scroll event handler on window, and using another table with a fixed position to show the header at the top of the page.

HTML:

<table id="header-fixed"></table>

CSS:

#header-fixed {
    position: fixed;
    top: 0px; display:none;
    background-color:white;
}

JavaScript:

var tableOffset = $("#table-1").offset().top;
var $header = $("#table-1 > thead").clone();
var $fixedHeader = $("#header-fixed").append($header);

$(window).bind("scroll", function() {
    var offset = $(this).scrollTop();

    if (offset >= tableOffset && $fixedHeader.is(":hidden")) {
        $fixedHeader.show();
    }
    else if (offset < tableOffset) {
        $fixedHeader.hide();
    }
});

This will show the table head when the user scrolls down far enough to hide the original table head. It will hide again when the user has scrolled the page up far enough again.

Working example: http://jsfiddle.net/andrewwhitaker/fj8wM/

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9  
I was thinking of this but what if the header columns' widths change based on the content? Unless the column widths are fixed you could have your header row not line up with the content rows. Just a thought. – Yzmir Ramirez Jan 17 '11 at 4:09
In my case, the table width is set to a fixed width, so that should not be a problem. – petercpwong Jan 18 '11 at 1:35
@PeterBZ: Does this answer your question? If not, could you provide me with more details? If so, could you accept the answer? – Andrew Whitaker Jan 18 '11 at 18:13
super,it helped me!thank you – sergionni Feb 7 '12 at 11:38

Well, I was trying to obtain the same effect without resorting to fixed size columns or having a fixed height for the entire table.

The solution I came up with is a hack. It consists of duplicating the entire table then hiding everything but the header, and making that have a fixed position.

HTML

<div id="table-container">
<table id="maintable">
    <thead>
        <tr>
            <th>Col1</th>
            <th>Col2</th>
            <th>Col3</th>
        </tr>
    </thead>
    <tbody>
        <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>some really long line here instead</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
                <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
                <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
            <td>info</td>
        </tr>
    </tbody>
</table>
<div id="bottom_anchor"></div>
</div>

CSS

body { height: 1000px; }
thead{
    background-color:white;
}

javascript

function moveScroll(){
    var scroll = $(window).scrollTop();
    var anchor_top = $("#maintable").offset().top;
    var anchor_bottom = $("#bottom_anchor").offset().top;
    if (scroll>anchor_top && scroll<anchor_bottom) {
    clone_table = $("#clone");
    if(clone_table.length == 0){
        clone_table = $("#maintable").clone();
        clone_table.attr('id', 'clone');
        clone_table.css({position:'fixed',
                 'pointer-events': 'none',
                 top:0});
        clone_table.width($("#maintable").width());
        $("#table-container").append(clone_table);
        $("#clone").css({visibility:'hidden'});
        $("#clone thead").css({'visibility:visible';pointer-events:'auto'});
    }
    } else {
    $("#clone").remove();
    }
}
$(window).scroll(moveScroll); 

See here: http://jsfiddle.net/QHQGF/7/

Edit: updated the code so that the thead can receive pointer events(so buttons and links in the header still work). This fixes the problem reported by luhfluh and Joe M.

New jsfiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/QHQGF/287/

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Nice example! Thank you, I'll use it. But wouldn't it perform better by clonning only <thead> and putting it into a <table> tag? You know, there may be a lot of elements in original table. – M2_ Dec 22 '11 at 10:36
I tried that first, the problem with that is that the size of the elements in the header depend on the contents of the table. If you have a row with big content the entire column, including the header will grow. If you clone just the thead you lose that information and you don't get the desired effect. See Yzmir Ramirez's comment on the accepted answer. This is the only way I found that works without fixed width columns. It isn't clean, I know, which is I way I said it was a hack. – entropy Dec 22 '11 at 16:12
Oh, I got it. This method is great because it works with fluid columns, I googled a little and couldn't find another one with that functionality. Anywhay, if i'll get it done somehow, I'll mention it here – M2_ Dec 22 '11 at 21:27
I tried to use this, and it's sort of working, but it's sticking a few pixels lower from the top, and also a few pixels to the left (I can see a few pixels of the table on top and to the right of the floating header). Any idea why? – Joe M. Feb 6 '12 at 23:44
1  
@luhfluh, yeah, the problem was due to the pointer-events:none in the cloned table. This is used so that clicks go through the clone and to the original table. Reverting it in the header of the cloned table so that the header(and only the header) is clickable fixes the problem. I've updated my post to reflect this :) – entropy Jul 19 '12 at 23:16
show 7 more comments

I was able to fix the problem with changing column widths. I started with Andrew's solution above (thanks so much!) and then added one little loop to set the widths of the cloned td's:

$("#header-fixed td").each(function(index){
    var index2 = index;
    $(this).width(function(index2){
        return $("#table-1 td").eq(index).width();
    });
});

This solves the problem without having to clone the entire table and hide the body. I'm brand new to JavaScript and jQuery (and to stack overflow), so any comments are appreciated.

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I am attempting a solution using the Chromatable Jquery plugin. The demo works in IE9, FF and Chrome (all on Windows).

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I too experienced the same issues with the border formatting not being shown using entrophy's code but a few little fixes and now the table is expandable and displays all css styling rules you may add.

to css add:

#maintable{width: 100%}    

then here is the new javascript:

    function moveScroll(){
    var scroll = $(window).scrollTop();
    var anchor_top = $("#maintable").offset().top;
    var anchor_bottom = $("#bottom_anchor").offset().top;
    if (scroll > anchor_top && scroll < anchor_bottom) {
        clone_table = $("#clone");
        if(clone_table.length === 0) {          
            clone_table = $("#maintable").clone();
            clone_table.attr({id: "clone"})
            .css({
                position: "fixed",
                "pointer-events": "none",
                 top:0
            })
            .width($("#maintable").width());

            $("#table-container").append(clone_table);
            // dont hide the whole table or you lose border style & 
            // actively match the inline width to the #maintable width if the 
            // container holding the table (window, iframe, div) changes width          
            $("#clone").width($("#maintable").width());
            // only the clone thead remains visible
            $("#clone thead").css({
                visibility:"visible"
            });
            // clone tbody is hidden
            $("#clone tbody").css({
                visibility:"hidden"
            });
            // add support for a tfoot element
            // and hide its cloned version too
            var footEl = $("#clone tfoot");
            if(footEl.length){
                footEl.css({
                    visibility:"hidden"
                });
            }
        }
    } 
    else {
        $("#clone").remove();
    }
}
$(window).scroll(moveScroll);
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