https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=157911
--- Comment #1 from Philipp <philipp.muehl...@gmail.com> --- In my understanding the bug reported is, that the “outer border” formatting effects the borderlines within the table, when the table crosses over 2 pages. That is, what I tried to replicate. I replicated the bug with: Version: 7.6.2.1 (X86_64) / LibreOffice Community Build ID: 56f7684011345957bbf33a7ee678afaf4d2ba333 CPU threads: 8; OS: Linux 6.5; UI render: default; VCL: gtk3 Locale: en-GB (en_GB.UTF-8); UI: en-US Calc: threaded Steps to replicate: 1. Open empty document 2. Create a table via Table > Insert Table 3. In the wizard klick “Insert” →Now you have a 2x2 Table with two rows width 4. Enlarge the table over a pagebreak (I placed cursor inside and pressed enter repeatedly (see attachment 157911_0_Table_no_formatting.odt) 6.Right klick on the table → Table properties → Borders 7. A) Give a border to the left and the bottom line (see attached screenshot for an example), when your table breaks with the second row over the page B) Give a border to the left and the top line, when your table breaks with the first row over the page 8. Hit enter Expected result: The left and the bottom line are formatted according to the settings Actual result: The two lines + the middle line are formatted, see example file 2 It seems as it works as a page setting, instead of a table setting. And either colours the bottom of one page or the top of the next. If the cells are expanded to further pages, the behaviour stays coherent. In another test I used “Simple List shaded” - See file 157911_3_Table_3pages.odt: Here the table spans 3 pages and only on the third page are bottom and top horizontal line coloured. If you colour the top line, the top and bottom of the first page will be coloured. As my replication is not 100% accurate if I compare it with the OP's screenshot, where only a cell after the pagebreak looks wrongly formatted, I'd like to ask Nicola to provide the sample file. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.