Basics
For controlling "cellpadding" in CSS, you can simply use padding
on table cells. E.g. for 10px of "cellpadding":
td {
padding: 10px;
}
For "cellspacing", you can apply the border-spacing
CSS property to your table. E.g. for 10px of "cellspacing":
table {
border-spacing: 10px;
border-collapse: separate;
}
This property will even allow separate horizontal and vertical spacing, something you couldn't do with old-school "cellspacing".
Issues in IE ≤ 7
This will work in almost all popular browsers except for Internet Explorer up through Internet Explorer 7, where you're almost out of luck. I say "almost" because these browsers still support the border-collapse
property, which merges the borders of adjoining table cells. If you're trying to eliminate cellspacing (that is, cellspacing="0"
) then border-collapse:collapse
should have the same effect: no space between table cells. This support is buggy, though, as it does not override an existing cellspacing
HTML attribute on the table element.
In short: for non-Internet Explorer 5-7 browsers, border-spacing
handles you. For Internet Explorer, if your situation is just right (you want 0 cellspacing and your table doesn't have it defined already), you can use border-collapse:collapse
.
table {
border-spacing: 0;
border-collapse: collapse;
}
Note: For a great overview of CSS properties that one can apply to tables and for which browsers, see this fantastic Quirksmode page.
Scoping rules
The main difference is scoping rules. Variables declared by var
keyword are scoped to the immediate function body (hence the function scope) while let
variables are scoped to the immediate enclosing block denoted by { }
(hence the block scope).
function run() {
var foo = "Foo";
let bar = "Bar";
console.log(foo, bar); // Foo Bar
{
var moo = "Mooo"
let baz = "Bazz";
console.log(moo, baz); // Mooo Bazz
}
console.log(moo); // Mooo
console.log(baz); // ReferenceError
}
run();
The reason why let
keyword was introduced to the language was function scope is confusing and was one of the main sources of bugs in JavaScript.
Take a look at this example from another stackoverflow question:
var funcs = [];
// let's create 3 functions
for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
// and store them in funcs
funcs[i] = function() {
// each should log its value.
console.log("My value: " + i);
};
}
for (var j = 0; j < 3; j++) {
// and now let's run each one to see
funcs[j]();
}
My value: 3
was output to console each time funcs[j]();
was invoked since anonymous functions were bound to the same variable.
People had to create immediately invoked functions to capture correct values from the loops but that was also hairy.
Hoisting
While variables declared with var
keyword are hoisted (initialized with undefined
before the code is run) which means they are accessible in their enclosing scope even before they are declared:
function run() {
console.log(foo); // undefined
var foo = "Foo";
console.log(foo); // Foo
}
run();
let
variables are not initialized until their definition is evaluated. Accessing them before the initialization results in a ReferenceError
. The variable is said to be in "temporal dead zone" from the start of the block until the initialization is processed.
function checkHoisting() {
console.log(foo); // ReferenceError
let foo = "Foo";
console.log(foo); // Foo
}
checkHoisting();
Creating global object property
At the top level, let
, unlike var
, does not create a property on the global object:
var foo = "Foo"; // globally scoped
let bar = "Bar"; // not allowed to be globally scoped
console.log(window.foo); // Foo
console.log(window.bar); // undefined
Redeclaration
In strict mode, var
will let you re-declare the same variable in the same scope while let
raises a SyntaxError.
'use strict';
var foo = "foo1";
var foo = "foo2"; // No problem, 'foo1' is replaced with 'foo2'.
let bar = "bar1";
let bar = "bar2"; // SyntaxError: Identifier 'bar' has already been declared
Best Answer
If you don't want to use JQuery to close the modal when you click on the ok button you could do something similar to the following code with plain JavaScript. You will have to assign an index to the selector to get it to work.