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Template:Sticky header

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Warning This template is used on approximately 5,200 pages and changes may be widely noticed. Test changes in the template's /sandbox or /testcases subpages, or in your own user subpage. Consider discussing changes on the talk page before implementing them.

This template makes a table's column headers stick to the top of the screen as the table's data is scrolled in and out of view. It's used on tall tables that have column headers that might be difficult to remember as you scroll through the data.

Usage

Include this template by adding {{sticky header}} or its redirect {{sticky-header}} above a table. Add one of the following classes to the table start wikitext.

Classes for table start wikitext: {| class="class1 class2".
Class Summary
sticky-header Make the first header row top sticky.
sticky-header-multi Requires sortable table. Make multiple header rows top sticky. Avoid use with the sorttop class that becomes sticky after sorting. Avoid making headers sticky that aren't for the entire table (ex. section header rows). Avoid making excessively tall header rows sticky that might block too much data on short screens (ex. mobile landscape).

class=unsortable can be added to all columns if necessary. See below: #Multi-row header that can't be visibly sortable

Single sticky header row

The sticky-header class is used to make the first header row top sticky. Sortable is not required.

Caption
Color A B C
Max 10 11 12
Red 1 2 3
Lime 4 5 6
Gold 7 8 9
Blue 10 11 12
Total 22 26 30
{{sticky header}}
{|class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"
|+ Caption
|-
! Color !! A !! B
!class="unsortable"| C
|-class=sorttop
| '''Max''' || 10 || 11 || 12
|-
| Red || 1 || 2 || 3
|-
| Lime || 4 || 5 || 6
|-
| Gold || 7 || 8 || 9
|-
| Blue || 10 || 11 || 12
|-class=sortbottom
| '''Total''' || 22 || 26 || 30
|}

Multiple sticky header rows

The sticky-header-multi class is used to make multiple header rows top sticky. Sortable table is required since sortable is currently the only way to move consecutive rows of column headers to the <thead> element. If some or all columns should not be sortable, then class=unsortable can be put in the header cell with the sorting icon. Table top will still be sticky. See Help:Sortable tables. If JavaScript is disabled, then sortable and this solution won't work.

Avoid using the sorttop class since sortable moves those rows into the <thead> element after sorting, which makes them top sticky too. A solution might be to move them to the bottom and use the sortbottom class instead.

Caption
Color Data
A B C
Red 1 2 3
Lime 4 5 6
Gold 7 8 9
Blue 10 11 12
Max 10 11 12
Total 22 26 30
{{sticky header}}
{|class="wikitable sortable sticky-header-multi"
|+ Caption
|-
!rowspan=2| Color
!colspan=3| Data
|-
! A !! B
!class="unsortable"| C
|-
| Red || 1 || 2 || 3
|-
| Lime || 4 || 5 || 6
|-
| Gold || 7 || 8 || 9
|-
| Blue || 10 || 11 || 12
|-class=sortbottom
| '''Max''' || 10 || 11 || 12
|-class=sortbottom
| '''Total''' || 22 || 26 || 30
|}

Header rows not for whole table

Consecutive rows of column headers are top sticky, so avoid adding a row of headers right under the column headers that don't apply to the entire table such as a section header meant to visually separate the table.

A solution might be to move each section to a column or separate tables, which also avoids accessibility issues per MOS:COLHEAD.

Another solution might be to add a blank row of data cells (| colspan=4 |) between the last column header row and the first section header row so the latter is not included in the consecutive header rows.

Caption
Color Data
A B C
Section 1
Red 1 2 3
Lime 4 5 6
Section 2
Gold 7 8 9
Blue 10 11 12
{{sticky header}}
{|class="wikitable sortable sticky-header-multi"
|+ Caption
|-
!rowspan=2| Color
!colspan=3| Data
|-
! A !! B !! C
|-
|colspan=4|
|-
!colspan=4| Section 1
|-
| Red || 1 || 2 || 3
|-
| Lime || 4 || 5 || 6
|-
!colspan=4| Section 2
|-
| Gold || 7 || 8 || 9
|-
| Blue || 10 || 11 || 12
|}

Excessively tall header rows

Avoid excessively tall header rows that might block too much or all data when sticky on a small mobile screen, especially in landscape orientation. Some solutions might be to move some of the header text to the table caption, more concise header text, remove line-breaks (<br>) in the headers, or split the table up into smaller tables to reduce headers.

Header
group
1
Header
group
2
Header
group
3
Header
1
Header
2
Header
3
Header
4
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data
data data data data

Multi-row header that can't be visibly sortable

This table is adapted from here: AptX#Variants. It uses class=sortable in order to have a sticky multi-row header, but all columns individually use class=unsortable.

None of the columns can be sortable because the type of info and data within any single column varies greatly, and there is no point in ordering it alphabetically or numerically. Plus sorting any column removes the rowspans in the first column which gives the overall order of the table.

aptX variants
SBC aptX aptX LL aptX HD aptX Adaptive Audio CD
(for reference) @ 279 kbit/s @ 420 kbit/s @ up to ~1.2 mbit/s (for reference)
misc. Launch ? < 2009 2012 2016 2018 2021 1980s
Trademark Qualcomm
(until August 2015: CSR, until July 2010: APT Licensing Ltd., until March 2005: Solid State Logic)
Related patents EP 0400755B1   (expired) EP 0398973B1   (revoked) aptX,
US 9398620B1   (expired)
aptX ?
Free implementations FFmpeg, libsbc FFmpeg, libopenaptx FFmpeg, libopenaptx FFmpeg, libopenaptx N/A
Proprietary implementations Multiple Qualcomm libaptX None Qualcomm libaptXHD ?
Chip CSR8635 CSR8670 CSR8675 QCC5100
Audio
Encoding
Word depth ? 16-bit 16-bit 16-bit
24-bit
24-bit 16-bit 16-bit
Sampling rate 44.1 kHz
48 kHz
 
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
 
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
 
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
 
44.1 kHz
48 kHz
96 kHz
44.1 kHz 44.1 kHz

 
Bit rate 345 kbit/s (@ 48 kHz) 352 kbit/s (@ 44.1 kHz)
384 kbit/s (@ 48 kHz)
352 kbit/s (@ 48 kHz) 576 kbit/s (24 bits @ 48 kHz) 279 kbit/s 420 kbit/s ~140 kbit/s to 1.2 mbit/s (content dependent) 1411 kbit/s (@ 44.1 kHz)
Constant Constant Constant Constant Variable Variable Constant
Codec latency ? 1.8 – 2.0 ms ? 1.8 – 2.0 ms 1.4 – 2.0 ms ?
Hardware transmitter latency ? ? ≈ 40 ms
(using dedicated antenna)
? ≈ 80 ms ?
Software transmitter latency (most phones) 200 – 500 ms
depending on the transmitting device
Backwards compatible with SBC[citation needed ] SBC, aptX SBC, aptX SBC, aptX, aptX HD ? ?
Sound
quality
THD+N @ 1 kHz −67 dB or −85 dB? −85 dB -80 dB or −90 dB? −90 dB −100 dB −96 dB −96 dB
Multi-tone @ 1 kHz −100 dB ? −100 dB −90 dB −100 dB ?
Multi-tone @ 10 kHz −65 dB ? −90 dB −85 dB −95 dB ?
Crosstalk −120 dB ? −155 dB −90 dB −200 dB ?
SNR @ 1 kHz 93 dB 93 dB 129 dB 130 dB 135 dB −96 dB −96 dB
PEAQ ODG −0.18 or −0.08? ? 0.05 or 0.04? −0.06 0.045 ?
Frequency response over Bluetooth 20 Hz – 22.7 kHz 20 Hz – 22.7 kHz 20 Hz – 22.7 kHz 20 Hz – 22.7 kHz 20 Hz – 22 kHz 20 Hz – 22 kHz

Known issues

Tested in browsers on Windows 10, Windows 11, iOS 17 (iphone SE 2020 and iPhone 14 Pro Max), and Android 14 (Samsung Galaxy S21).

  • Does not work on the MonoBook skin when the browser width is 550 pixels or less due to the body.skin--responsive .monobook-body {overflow: auto;} style that can't be overridden.
  • On Android phones, table headers aren't top-sticky if at least one table using this template is wider than the screen, which is more likely in portrait orientation. The table's horizontal scroll doesn't work with this template, so wide tables span outside of the main content area making the entire page wider and requiring you to instead horizontally scroll the entire page. Zooming out to see the entire table makes the headers sticky, but also makes the text smaller and less readable the wider the table is. Currently, the only semi-solution is to view the zoomed out sticky headers in landscape orientation instead of portrait orientation so that the text is more readable.
  • <div style="overflow:auto"></div> - Do not use this around tables. It prevents sticky headers until removed. See diff. See "List by region" table.
  • Jumping to an {{Anchor }} (or similar mechanism for creating an anchor) in a table causes that location of the table to be at the top of the screen, where the sticky header covers it. True for all skins except Vector 2022 and MinervaNeue skin (mobile). See discussions here and here.

See also

More template styles for tables:

The above documentation is transcluded from Template:Sticky header/doc. (edit | history)
Editors can experiment in this template's sandbox (edit | diff) and testcases (edit) pages.
Add categories to the /doc subpage. Subpages of this template.

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