Você pode usar a API do Datatable para pegar qualquer linha, não precisa adicionar id's nelas.
Veja abaixo que eu aplico uma cor vermelha na segunda linha:
$(document).ready(function(){
var tabela = $('#example').DataTable();
var linha2 = tabela.row(1).nodes();
$(linha2).css("color", "red");
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.datatables.net/1.10.16/css/jquery.dataTables.min.css">
<script src="https://cdn.datatables.net/1.10.16/js/jquery.dataTables.min.js"></script>
<table id="example" class="display nowrap dataTable dtr-inline collapsed" style="width: 100%;" role="grid" aria-describedby="example_info"><thead><tr role="row"><th class="sorting_asc" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 119px;" aria-sort="ascending" aria-label="Name: activate to sort column descending">Name</th><th class="sorting" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 190px;" aria-label="Position: activate to sort column ascending">Position</th><th class="sorting" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 88px;" aria-label="Office: activate to sort column ascending">Office</th><th class="dt-body-right sorting" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 34px;" aria-label="Age: activate to sort column ascending">Age</th><th class="sorting" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 79px;" aria-label="Start date: activate to sort column ascending">Start date</th><th class="dt-body-right sorting" tabindex="0" aria-controls="example" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="width: 0px; display: none;" aria-label="Salary: activate to sort column ascending">Salary</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr role="row" class="odd"><td tabindex="0" class="sorting_1">Airi Satou</td><td>Accountant</td><td>Tokyo</td><td class=" dt-body-right">33</td><td>2008/11/28</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$162,700</td></tr><tr role="row" class="even"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Angelica Ramos</td><td>Chief Executive Officer (CEO)</td><td>London</td><td class=" dt-body-right">47</td><td>2009/10/09</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$1,200,000</td></tr><tr role="row" class="odd"><td tabindex="0" class="sorting_1">Ashton Cox</td><td>Junior Technical Author</td><td>San Francisco</td><td class=" dt-body-right">66</td><td>2009/01/12</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$86,000</td></tr><tr role="row" class="even"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Bradley Greer</td><td>Software Engineer</td><td>London</td><td class=" dt-body-right">41</td><td>2012/10/13</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$132,000</td></tr><tr role="row" class="odd"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Brenden Wagner</td><td>Software Engineer</td><td>San Francisco</td><td class=" dt-body-right">28</td><td>2011/06/07</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$206,850</td></tr><tr role="row" class="even"><td tabindex="0" class="sorting_1">Brielle Williamson</td><td>Integration Specialist</td><td>New York</td><td class=" dt-body-right">61</td><td>2012/12/02</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$372,000</td></tr><tr role="row" class="odd"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Bruno Nash</td><td>Software Engineer</td><td>London</td><td class=" dt-body-right">38</td><td>2011/05/03</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$163,500</td></tr><tr role="row" class="even"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Caesar Vance</td><td>Pre-Sales Support</td><td>New York</td><td class=" dt-body-right">21</td><td>2011/12/12</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$106,450</td></tr><tr role="row" class="odd"><td class="sorting_1" tabindex="0">Cara Stevens</td><td>Sales Assistant</td><td>New York</td><td class=" dt-body-right">46</td><td>2011/12/06</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$145,600</td></tr><tr role="row" class="even"><td tabindex="0" class="sorting_1" style="">Cedric Kelly</td><td>Senior Javascript Developer</td><td>Edinburgh</td><td class=" dt-body-right">22</td><td>2012/03/29</td><td class=" dt-body-right" style="display: none;">$433,060</td></tr></tbody><tfoot><tr><th rowspan="1" colspan="1">Name</th><th rowspan="1" colspan="1">Position</th><th rowspan="1" colspan="1">Office</th><th class="dt-body-right" rowspan="1" colspan="1">Age</th><th rowspan="1" colspan="1">Start date</th><th class="dt-body-right" rowspan="1" colspan="1" style="display: none;">Salary</th></tr></tfoot></table>
O código tabela.row(1).nodes()
retorna o segundo elemento tr
da tabela. As linhas começam com índice 0
, ou seja, primeira linha seria tabela.row(0).nodes()
.