<TR> and </TR>

Description:

Defines a row inside of a table.

Attributes:

align=alignment
Defines the horizontal alignment of the data within the row.

CENTER Center the text.
JUSTIFY Justify the text within the cell.
LEFT Align the text to the left.
RIGHT Align the text to the right.
background="url"
Specifies a URL containing an image to be displayed as a background for the cell. If the image is smaller than the table the image will be tiled.
bgcolor="color"
The color for the background of the cell.
bordercolor="color"
The color of the border. Ignored if the BORDER attribute is missing or zero.
bordercolordark="color"
One of the colors for a 3D border. Ignored if the BORDER attribute is missing or zero.
bordercolorlight="color"
One of the colors for a 3D border. Ignored if the BORDER attribute is missing or zero.
class=class
Indicates that the text is to be formatted using the specified class.
dir=direction
Indicates the direction (right or left) that the text is to be displayed. Useful for languages which display left to right.
event=JavaScript
When event occurs, execute the specified JavaScript.
id = "name"
You can give a text a name, which allows it to be referenced and changed in a script (dynamic HTML).
lang="lang"
Indicates the language of the text within the text.
nowrap
Use this to keep data within a table from wrapping if the width of the table is exceeded.
style="style"
Defines the style in which the text will be displayed. This overrides any style elements at an "outer" level, such as from the BODY or the Cascading Style Sheet.
title="title"
You can give a text a title if you want. This provides some additional information about the text. I'm not sure why you would want to do this, but you could.
valign=n
Specifies the vertical alignment of the data within the cells.

BASELINE First line of each element in the cell aligned with a baseline.
BOTTOM Align elements with bottom of cell.
MIDDLE Align to middle.
TOP Align to the top.

Examples:

<table border="1">
  <tr>
     <td>Cell 1</td>
     <td>Cell 2</td>
     <td rowspan="3">Rowspan</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
     <td colspan="2">Colspan</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
     <td>Cell 3</td>
     <td>Cell 4</td>
  </tr>
</table>

 

Cell 1 Cell 2 Rowspan
Colspan
Cell 3 Cell 4