4.1 C
Munich
Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

Must read

Okay, so I had this project where I needed to display a bunch of data, and I figured a table would be the best way to do it. It’s all about football stuff, specifically the Leeds team. I mean, who doesn’t love a good table, right? It’s way better than just throwing a wall of text at people.

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

Getting Started

First things first, I needed to figure out what data I wanted to show. Goals, assists, yellow cards… you know, the usual football stats. I decided to keep it simple for starters: Player Name, Position, and Goals Scored.

Building the Thing

I’m no coding whiz, so I started with some basic HTML. I used the <table> tag, obviously. Inside that, I put a <thead> for the header row (where I put the column titles) and a <tbody> for the actual data.

Here is the code:

<table>

<thead>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

<tr>

<th>Player Name</th>

<th>Position</th>

<th>Goals Scored</th>

</tr>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

</thead>

<tbody>

<!-- Data goes here -->

</tbody>

</table>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

Putting in the Data

Next up, I started filling in the <tbody>. Each player got their own row (<tr>), and within each row, I used <td> tags for each piece of data (name, position, goals).

  • I grabbed the player names from a list I had.
  • I knew their positions, so I just typed those in.
  • The goal count… well, I had to look that up, but it wasn’t too hard.

I ended up with something like this (just a snippet, of course):

<tbody>

<tr>

<td>Patrick Bamford</td>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

<td>Forward</td>

<td>17</td>

</tr>

<tr>

<td>Jack Harrison</td>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

<td>Midfielder</td>

<td>8</td>

</tr>

<!-- More players... -->

</tbody>

Checking Leeds in Table: A Quick Guide to Their Place.

Making it Look Okay

Honestly, the plain HTML table looked pretty boring. So, I will add some styles in it.

Finished! (For Now)

And there you have it! A simple table displaying some Leeds United player data. It’s not the prettiest thing in the world, but it gets the job done. I might add more stats or fancy styling later, but for now, I’m happy with it.

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest article