2019.1

Table Of Contents
l
For an existing Detail Table you can check the option Hide when empty on the
Attributes pane.
HTML elements and attributes
In HTML, a Detail Table is just a normal <table> element with rows and cells (see "HTML
element: table" on page707). But apart from the native attributes of a table, row and cell
element, some data- attributes can be seen in detail tables:
l data-detail: The name of the detail table in the data, for example: data-
detail="products".
l data-repeat: The row will be repeated if it has this attribute: data-repeat="".
l data-showin: This attribute determines the visibility of the row in different situations, if
the table gets split over multiple pages:
l header will make the row show up at the top of the table on the first page only.
l footer will make the row show up in the footer of the table on the last page only.
l break used in a row in the <thead> section of a table indicates that the row should
not be displayed at the top of the table on the first page, but only on following pages.
Used on a row in the <tfoot> section, it indicates that the row should be displayed
before each page-break. This value may be combined with footer or header, for
example: data-showin="footer, break", to make the row show up on every
page.
Note that these options can also be set via the user interface: right-click on the row and
select Row > Show; see "Adding a row at the bottom or the top of a Detail Table" on
page793.
l data-breakable: this attribute is added to every copied row (in preview mode or when
creating output), in each of them with a unique ID as its value. This is required by the
pagination routines of Connect to split the table across pages.
l data-column-resize, if present, indicates that the columns may be resized (data-
column-resize="").
Personalized URL
Personalized URLs (pURLs) are links that are tailor-made for a specific purpose, generally for
individual clients. They can serve multiple purposes, for instance:
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Click Tracking: A unique ID in the link makes it possible to track the source of the click
(for example, a link in an email campaign).
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