That's interesting - we were just discussing yesterday how all the pages that we're updating to the 3-0 template don't have bold th's by default, and whether we should update the 3-0 styles to do so.
I hadn't thought about the font-weight of th elements from that point of view. It's an interesting point.
(Aside: I agree that the data is the important information, but the whole point of putting that data into a table is so that the information can be scanned per column isn't it? If so, the critical piece of information to do this is the column header. But... right, in the end, that's still no reason to make it more prominent than the data.)
That's interesting - we were just discussing yesterday how all the pages that we're updating to the 3-0 template don't have bold th's by default, and whether we should update the 3-0 styles to do so.
I hadn't thought about the font-weight of th elements from that point of view. It's an interesting point.
(Aside: I agree that the data is the important information, but the whole point of putting that data into a table is so that the information can be scanned per column isn't it? If so, the critical piece of information to do this is the column header. But... right, in the end, that's still no reason to make it more prominent than the data.)