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Table (information)

A table is an arrangement of information or data, typically in rows and columns, or possibly in a more complex structure. Tables are widely used in communication, research, and data analysis. Tables appear in print media, handwritten notes, computer software, architectural ornamentation, traffic signs, and many other places. The precise conventions and terminology for describing tables vary depending on the context. Further, tables differ significantly in variety, structure, flexibility, notation, representation and use.[1][2][3][4][5] Information or data conveyed in table form is said to be in tabular format (adjective). In books and technical articles, tables are typically presented apart from the main text in numbered and captioned floating blocks.

An example table rendered in a web browser using HTML

Basic description edit

A table consists of an ordered arrangement of rows and columns. This is a simplified description of the most basic kind of table. Certain considerations follow from this simplified description:

  • the term row has several common synonyms (e.g., record, k-tuple, n-tuple, vector);
  • the term column has several common synonyms (e.g., field, parameter, property, attribute, stanchion);
  • a column is usually identified by a name;
  • a column name can consist of a word, phrase or a numerical index;
  • the intersection of a row and a column is called a cell.

The elements of a table may be grouped, segmented, or arranged in many different ways, and even nested recursively. Additionally, a table may include metadata, annotations, a header,[6] a footer or other ancillary features.[5]

Simple table edit

The following illustrates a simple table with three columns and nine rows. The first row is not counted, because it is only used to display the column names. This is called a "header row".

Age table
First name Last name Age
Tinu Elejogun 14
Javier Zapata 28
Lily McGarrett 18
Olatunkbo Chijiaku 22
Adrienne Anthoula 22
Axelia Athanasios 22
Jon-Kabat Zinn 22
Thabang Mosoa 15
Rhian Ellis 12

Multi-dimensional table edit

 
An example of a table containing rows with summary information. The summary information consists of subtotals that are combined from previous rows within the same column.

The concept of dimension is also a part of basic terminology.[7] Any "simple" table can be represented as a "multi-dimensional" table by normalizing the data values into ordered hierarchies. A common example of such a table is a multiplication table.

Multiplication table
× 1 2 3
1 1 2 3
2 2 4 6
3 3 6 9

In multi-dimensional tables, each cell in the body of the table (and the value of that cell) relates to the values at the beginnings of the column (i.e. the header), the row, and other structures in more complex tables. This is an injective relation: each combination of the values of the headers row (row 0, for lack of a better term) and the headers column (column 0 for lack of a better term) is related to a unique cell in the table:

  • Column 1 and row 1 will only correspond to cell (1,1);
  • Column 1 and row 2 will only correspond to cell (2,1) etc.

The first column often presents information dimension description by which the rest of the table is navigated. This column is called "stub column". Tables may contain three or multiple dimensions and can be classified by the number of dimensions. Multi-dimensional tables may have super-rows - rows that describe additional dimensions for the rows that are presented below that row and are usually grouped in a tree-like structure. This structure is typically visually presented with an appropriate number of white spaces in front of each stub's label.[8]

In literature tables often present numerical values, cumulative statistics, categorical values, and at times parallel descriptions in form of text.[9] They can condense large amount of information to a limited space and therefore they are popular in scientific literature in many fields of study.

 
Adrien Auzout's "A TABLE of the Apertures of Object-Glasses" from a 1665 article in Philosophical Transactions

Generic representation edit

As a communication tool, a table allows a form of generalization of information from an unlimited number of different social or scientific contexts. It provides a familiar way to convey information that might otherwise not be obvious or readily understood.

For example, in the following diagram, two alternate representations of the same information are presented side by side. On the left is the NFPA 704 standard "fire diamond" with example values indicated and on the right is a simple table displaying the same values, along with additional information. Both representations convey essentially the same information, but the tabular representation is arguably more comprehensible to someone who is not familiar with the NFPA 704 standard. The tabular representation may not, however, be ideal for every circumstance (for example because of space limitations, or safety reasons).

Fire diamond
Standard Representation Tabular Representation
 Health 3: Short exposure could cause serious temporary or residual injury. E.g. chlorine gasFlammability 2: Must be moderately heated or exposed to relatively high ambient temperature before ignition can occur. Flash point between 38 and 93 °C (100 and 200 °F). E.g. diesel fuelInstability 1: Normally stable, but can become unstable at elevated temperatures and pressures. E.g. calciumSpecial hazards (white): no code
3
2
1
Risk levels of hazardous materials in this facility
Health Risk Flammability Reactivity Special
Level 3 Level 2 Level 1

Specific uses edit

There are several specific situations in which tables are routinely used as a matter of custom or formal convention.

Publishing edit

Mathematics edit

Natural sciences edit

Information technology edit

Software applications edit

Modern software applications give users the ability to generate, format, and edit tables and tabular data for a wide variety of uses, for example:

Software development edit

Tables have uses in software development for both high-level specification and low-level implementation. Usage in software specification can encompass ad hoc inclusion of simple decision tables in textual documents through to the use of tabular specification methodologies, examples of which include Software Cost Reduction[10] and Statestep.[11] Proponents of tabular techniques, among whom David Parnas is prominent, emphasize their understandability, as well as the quality and cost advantages of a format allowing systematic inspection,[12] while corresponding shortcomings experienced with a graphical notation were cited in motivating the development of at least two tabular approaches.[11][13]

At a programming level, software may be implemented using constructs generally represented or understood as tabular, whether to store data (perhaps to memoize earlier results), for example, in arrays or hash tables, or control tables determining the flow of program execution in response to various events or inputs.

Databases edit

Database systems often store data in structures called tables; in which columns are data fields and rows represent data records.

Historical relationship to furniture edit

In medieval counting houses, the tables were covered with a piece of checkered cloth, to count money.[14][15]Exchequer is an archaic term for the English institution which accounted for money owed to the monarch. Thus the checkerboard tables of stacks of coins are a concrete realization of this information.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fink, Arlene (2005). How to Conduct Surveys. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications. ISBN 1-4129-1423-X.
  2. ^ McNabb, David (2002). Research Methods in Public Administration and Nonprofit Management. Armonk: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-0957-6.
  3. ^ Morgan, George (2004). Spss for Introductory Statistics. Hillsdale: Lawrence Erlbaum. ISBN 0-8058-4789-8.
  4. ^ Robey, David (2000). Sound and Structure in the Divine Comedy. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-818498-0.
  5. ^ a b Zielinski, Krzysztof (2006). Software Engineering: Evolution and Emerging Technologies. Amsterdam: IOS Press. ISBN 1-58603-559-2.
  6. ^ see e.g., Page header or Header (computing)
  7. ^ The concept of "dimension" is often applied to tables in different contexts and with different meanings. For example, what is described as a "Simple Table" in this article is alternatively described as a "two dimensional array". This is distinct from "multi-dimensional table" as presented in this article.
  8. ^ Milosevic N, Gregson C, Hernandez R, Nenadic G (June 2016). "Disentangling the Structure of Tables in Scientific Literature" (PDF). Proceedings of 21st International Conference on Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems (NLDB 2016). Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 9612: 162–174. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-41754-7_14. ISBN 978-3-319-41753-0. S2CID 19538141.
  9. ^ Milosevic N, Gregson C, Hernandez R, Nenadic G (February 2019). "A framework for information extraction from tables in biomedical literature". International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition. 22 (1): 55–78. arXiv:1902.10031. doi:10.1007/s10032-019-00317-0. S2CID 62880746.
  10. ^ Heitmeyer, Constance L. (2002). . Washington D.C.: Naval Research Laboratory. Archived from the original on March 12, 2012.
  11. ^ a b Breen, Michael (2005). "Experience of using a lightweight formal specification method for a commercial embedded system product line" (PDF). Requirements Engineering Journal. 10 (2): 161–172. doi:10.1007/s00766-004-0209-1. S2CID 16928695.
  12. ^ Janicki, Ryszard; Parnas, David Lorge; Zucker, Jeffery (1997). "Tabular representations in relational documents". In Brink, C.; Kahl, W.; Schmidt, G. (eds.). Relational Methods in Computer Science. Springer Verlag. ISBN 3-211-82971-7.
  13. ^ Leveson, Nancy G.; Heimdahl, Mats P. E.; Reese, Jon Damon (1999). "Designing Specification Languages for Process-Control Systems: Lessons Learned and Steps to the Future". Seventh ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on the Foundations on Software Engineering (PDF). Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 1687. pp. 127–146. doi:10.1007/3-540-48166-4_9. hdl:11299/217294. ISBN 978-3-540-66538-0.
  14. ^ Baxter, W. T. (1989). "Early Accounting: The Tally and Checkerboard". The Accounting Historians Journal. 16 (2): 43–83. doi:10.2308/0148-4184.16.2.43. ISSN 0148-4184. JSTOR 40697984.
  15. ^ "The Exchequer: a chequered history? - History of government". history.blog.gov.uk. 14 August 2013. Retrieved 2023-04-13.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tables (information) at Wikimedia Commons

table, information, sortable, tables, wikipedia, help, sorting, disambiguation, information, table, syntax, wikipedia, help, table, table, arrangement, information, data, typically, rows, columns, possibly, more, complex, structure, tables, widely, used, commu. For sortable tables in Wikipedia see Help Sorting disambiguation For information on table syntax in Wikipedia see Help Table A table is an arrangement of information or data typically in rows and columns or possibly in a more complex structure Tables are widely used in communication research and data analysis Tables appear in print media handwritten notes computer software architectural ornamentation traffic signs and many other places The precise conventions and terminology for describing tables vary depending on the context Further tables differ significantly in variety structure flexibility notation representation and use 1 2 3 4 5 Information or data conveyed in table form is said to be in tabular format adjective In books and technical articles tables are typically presented apart from the main text in numbered and captioned floating blocks An example table rendered in a web browser using HTML Contents 1 Basic description 1 1 Simple table 1 2 Multi dimensional table 2 Generic representation 3 Specific uses 3 1 Publishing 3 2 Mathematics 3 3 Natural sciences 3 4 Information technology 3 4 1 Software applications 3 4 2 Software development 3 4 3 Databases 4 Historical relationship to furniture 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBasic description editA table consists of an ordered arrangement of rows and columns This is a simplified description of the most basic kind of table Certain considerations follow from this simplified description the term row has several common synonyms e g record k tuple n tuple vector the term column has several common synonyms e g field parameter property attribute stanchion a column is usually identified by a name a column name can consist of a word phrase or a numerical index the intersection of a row and a column is called a cell The elements of a table may be grouped segmented or arranged in many different ways and even nested recursively Additionally a table may include metadata annotations a header 6 a footer or other ancillary features 5 Simple table edit The following illustrates a simple table with three columns and nine rows The first row is not counted because it is only used to display the column names This is called a header row Age table First name Last name AgeTinu Elejogun 14Javier Zapata 28Lily McGarrett 18Olatunkbo Chijiaku 22Adrienne Anthoula 22Axelia Athanasios 22Jon Kabat Zinn 22Thabang Mosoa 15Rhian Ellis 12Multi dimensional table edit nbsp An example of a table containing rows with summary information The summary information consists of subtotals that are combined from previous rows within the same column The concept of dimension is also a part of basic terminology 7 Any simple table can be represented as a multi dimensional table by normalizing the data values into ordered hierarchies A common example of such a table is a multiplication table Multiplication table 1 2 31 1 2 32 2 4 63 3 6 9In multi dimensional tables each cell in the body of the table and the value of that cell relates to the values at the beginnings of the column i e the header the row and other structures in more complex tables This is an injective relation each combination of the values of the headers row row 0 for lack of a better term and the headers column column 0 for lack of a better term is related to a unique cell in the table Column 1 and row 1 will only correspond to cell 1 1 Column 1 and row 2 will only correspond to cell 2 1 etc The first column often presents information dimension description by which the rest of the table is navigated This column is called stub column Tables may contain three or multiple dimensions and can be classified by the number of dimensions Multi dimensional tables may have super rows rows that describe additional dimensions for the rows that are presented below that row and are usually grouped in a tree like structure This structure is typically visually presented with an appropriate number of white spaces in front of each stub s label 8 In literature tables often present numerical values cumulative statistics categorical values and at times parallel descriptions in form of text 9 They can condense large amount of information to a limited space and therefore they are popular in scientific literature in many fields of study nbsp Adrien Auzout s A TABLE of the Apertures of Object Glasses from a 1665 article in Philosophical TransactionsGeneric representation editAs a communication tool a table allows a form of generalization of information from an unlimited number of different social or scientific contexts It provides a familiar way to convey information that might otherwise not be obvious or readily understood For example in the following diagram two alternate representations of the same information are presented side by side On the left is the NFPA 704 standard fire diamond with example values indicated and on the right is a simple table displaying the same values along with additional information Both representations convey essentially the same information but the tabular representation is arguably more comprehensible to someone who is not familiar with the NFPA 704 standard The tabular representation may not however be ideal for every circumstance for example because of space limitations or safety reasons Fire diamond Standard Representation Tabular Representation nbsp 321 Risk levels of hazardous materials in this facility Health Risk Flammability Reactivity SpecialLevel 3 Level 2 Level 1Specific uses editThere are several specific situations in which tables are routinely used as a matter of custom or formal convention Publishing edit Cross reference Table of contents Mathematics edit Main article Mathematical table Arithmetic Multiplication table Logic Truth table Natural sciences edit Chemistry Periodic table Oceanography tide table Information technology edit Software applications edit Modern software applications give users the ability to generate format and edit tables and tabular data for a wide variety of uses for example word processing applications spreadsheet applications presentation software tables specified in HTML or another markup languageSoftware development edit Tables have uses in software development for both high level specification and low level implementation Usage in software specification can encompass ad hoc inclusion of simple decision tables in textual documents through to the use of tabular specification methodologies examples of which include Software Cost Reduction 10 and Statestep 11 Proponents of tabular techniques among whom David Parnas is prominent emphasize their understandability as well as the quality and cost advantages of a format allowing systematic inspection 12 while corresponding shortcomings experienced with a graphical notation were cited in motivating the development of at least two tabular approaches 11 13 At a programming level software may be implemented using constructs generally represented or understood as tabular whether to store data perhaps to memoize earlier results for example in arrays or hash tables or control tables determining the flow of program execution in response to various events or inputs Databases edit Database systems often store data in structures called tables in which columns are data fields and rows represent data records Historical relationship to furniture editIn medieval counting houses the tables were covered with a piece of checkered cloth to count money 14 15 Exchequer is an archaic term for the English institution which accounted for money owed to the monarch Thus the checkerboard tables of stacks of coins are a concrete realization of this information citation needed See also editChart Diagram Abstract data type Column database Information graphics Periodic table Reference table Row database Table database Table HTML Tensor Dependent and independent variablesReferences edit Fink Arlene 2005 How to Conduct Surveys Thousand Oaks Sage Publications ISBN 1 4129 1423 X McNabb David 2002 Research Methods in Public Administration and Nonprofit Management Armonk M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 0957 6 Morgan George 2004 Spss for Introductory Statistics Hillsdale Lawrence Erlbaum ISBN 0 8058 4789 8 Robey David 2000 Sound and Structure in the Divine Comedy Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 818498 0 a b Zielinski Krzysztof 2006 Software Engineering Evolution and Emerging Technologies Amsterdam IOS Press ISBN 1 58603 559 2 see e g Page header or Header computing The concept of dimension is often applied to tables in different contexts and with different meanings For example what is described as a Simple Table in this article is alternatively described as a two dimensional array This is distinct from multi dimensional table as presented in this article Milosevic N Gregson C Hernandez R Nenadic G June 2016 Disentangling the Structure of Tables in Scientific Literature PDF Proceedings of 21st International Conference on Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems NLDB 2016 Lecture Notes in Computer Science 9612 162 174 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 41754 7 14 ISBN 978 3 319 41753 0 S2CID 19538141 Milosevic N Gregson C Hernandez R Nenadic G February 2019 A framework for information extraction from tables in biomedical literature International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition 22 1 55 78 arXiv 1902 10031 doi 10 1007 s10032 019 00317 0 S2CID 62880746 Heitmeyer Constance L 2002 Software Cost Reduction Washington D C Naval Research Laboratory Archived from the original on March 12 2012 a b Breen Michael 2005 Experience of using a lightweight formal specification method for a commercial embedded system product line PDF Requirements Engineering Journal 10 2 161 172 doi 10 1007 s00766 004 0209 1 S2CID 16928695 Janicki Ryszard Parnas David Lorge Zucker Jeffery 1997 Tabular representations in relational documents In Brink C Kahl W Schmidt G eds Relational Methods in Computer Science Springer Verlag ISBN 3 211 82971 7 Leveson Nancy G Heimdahl Mats P E Reese Jon Damon 1999 Designing Specification Languages for Process Control Systems Lessons Learned and Steps to the Future Seventh ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on the Foundations on Software Engineering PDF Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 1687 pp 127 146 doi 10 1007 3 540 48166 4 9 hdl 11299 217294 ISBN 978 3 540 66538 0 Baxter W T 1989 Early Accounting The Tally and Checkerboard The Accounting Historians Journal 16 2 43 83 doi 10 2308 0148 4184 16 2 43 ISSN 0148 4184 JSTOR 40697984 The Exchequer a chequered history History of government history blog gov uk 14 August 2013 Retrieved 2023 04 13 External links edit nbsp Look up table in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Tables information at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Table information amp oldid 1214435833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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