angular-mesa
A table component built in angular. Handles large datasets by virtualizing rows.
Feature List
- column-specific filtering
- column sorting
- stacked ordering
- column resizing
- column re-ordering
- localStorage state persistance
- pagination
Installation
$ git clone git@github.com:DataTorrent/angular-mesa.git
$ cd angular-mesa
$ npm install .
$ bower install
Getting Started
- Include ap-mesa.js and ap-mesa.css in your project.
- Add the
apMesa
module to your project's angular dependencies. - Instantiate table instances with a
<ap-mesa>
tag:
<ap-mesa
options="options"
columns="columns"
rows="rows"
table-class="table"
selected="array_of_selected">
</ap-mesa>
Running the Demo
Clone the repository and run the following:
$ npm install
$ bower install
$ grunt serve
Attributes
The ap-mesa
tag can have the following attributes:
attribute | type | required | description |
---|
options | object | no | An object containing various options for the table. See Options Object below for details |
columns | Array | yes | An array of column definition objects. See Column Definitions below. |
rows | Array | yes | An array of data to be displayed. See the note on maintaining $$hashKeys in order to allow for more performant data updates |
table-class | String | no | A string of classes to be attached to the actual <table> element that gets created |
selected | Array | no | This should be provided when using the selector built-in format. See the Row Selection section below. |
track-by | String | yes | This string should be the unique key on data objects that ng-repeat should use to keep track of rows in the table |
Options Object
The options object should be available on the parent scope of the <ap-mesa>
element. It is optional (defaults are used) and has the following keys:
key | type | default | description |
---|
rowPadding | number | 10 | Number of pixels to pre-render before and after the viewport |
sortClasses | Array | (see below) | |
storage | Object | undefined | |
storageHash | String | undefined | Non-sequential "version" hash used to identify and compare items in storage . |
storageKey | String | undefined | Used as the key to store and retrieve items from storage , if it is specified. |
initialSorts | Array | [] | Array of objects defining an initial sort order. Each object must have id and dir , can be "+" for ascending, "-" for descending. |
loadingText | String | 'loading' | String to show when data is loading |
noRowsText | String | 'no rows' | String to show when no rows are visible |
loadingTemplateUrl | String | undefined | Path to template for td when loading |
loadingPromise | Object | undefined | Promise object for table data loading. Used to resolve loading state when data is available. |
loadingErrorTemplateUrl | String | undefined | Path to template for td when there is an error loading table data. |
loadingErrorText | String | 'error loading results' | String to show when loading fails |
noRowsTemplateUrl | String | undefined | Path to template for td when there are no rows to show. |
scrollDebounce | number | 100 | Wait time when debouncing the scroll event. Used when updating rows. Milliseconds. |
bgSizeMultiplier | number | 1 | The background-size css attribute of the placeholder rows is set to bgSizeMultiplier * rowHeight. |
defaultRowHeight | number | 40 | When there are no rows to calculate the height, this number is used as the fallback |
bodyHeight | number | 300 | The pixel height for the body of the table. Note that unless fixedHeight is set to true, this will behave as a max-height. |
fillHeight | boolean | false | If true, the table will fill the calculated height of the parent element. Note that this overrides bodyHeight . The table will listen for 'apMesa:resize' events from the rootScope to recalculate the height. |
fixedHeight | boolean | false | If true, the table body will always have a height of bodyHeight , regardless of whether the rows fill up the vertical space. |
onRegisterApi | function | {} | Provides a access to select table controller methods, including selectAll, deselectAll, isSelectedAll, setLoading, etc. |
getter | function | {} | Customize the way to get column value. If not specified, get columen value by row[column.key] |
expandableTemplateUrl | String | undefined | A template reference to be used for the expandable row feature. See Expandable Rows below. |
The options object is also the correct place to pass arbitrary data to table cell templates because it will be available as options
in the table cell template scope. For example, if you want a click in a cell to call a function that is
otherwise out of the scope of the table, you can do this:
scope.myTableOptions = {
myFunction: function() { console.log('hello'); }
};
scope.myTableColumns = [
{
id: 'foo',
key: 'foo',
template: '<a href ng-click="options.myFunction()">{{ row.foo }}</a>'
}
];
Loading
A common requirement for tables showing dynamically loaded data is to show loading feedback. There are several options pertaining to this: loading
, loadingText
, and loadingTemplateUrl
. To disable loading text, a promise object from data loading can be provided, so that setLoading(false)
can be attached to promise.then()
. Optionally, onRegisterApi
function can be specified, which provides direct access to setLoading
and other table controller methods. This function specifies a single argument, which is the api object provided by the table. Example: onRegisterApi: function(api) { $scope.tableAPI = api; }
.
No Visible Rows
Similar to loading state, there are two options for visual representation of when there are no rows: noRowsText
and noRowsTemplateUrl
.
sortClasses
Default Value: [ 'glyphicon glyphicon-sort', 'glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-up', 'glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-down' ]
If a column has a sort
function specified, the column header will contain a <span>
element with a css class of sorting-icon
. This sortClasses
array contains three strings that will be appended to the <span>
className, one for each state of a sorted column: [classes_for_no_sort, classes_for_ascending_sort, classes_for_descending_sort].
Storage
If defined, this requires the presence of storageKey
. This object should follow a subset of the API for localStorage
; specifically having the methods setItem
, getItem
, and removeItem
. It will use storageKey
as the key to set. The most common use-case for this is simply to pass localStorage
to this option.
options
decoration
An advantage of providing an options object is that apMesa decorates it with a few things for greater control. Below are the things apMesa adds.
options.scrollingPromise
When the user is scrolling, this property will be a promise that gets resolved when the user has stopped scrolling. If the user is not scrolling, this will have a value of null
. This can be useful if the table has a lot of columns and you want to optimize performance by deferring updates to when the user stops scrolling.
Setting Default Options with apMesaProvider
A common use-case is to set default options for all tables in a given project. This can be achieved using the apMesa
service provider. Add the following to a config block in your project:
angular
.module('myApp')
.config(function(apMesaProvider) {
apMesaProvider.setDefaultOptions({
sortClasses: ['glyphicon glyphicon-sort', 'glyphicon glyphicon-sort-by-attributes', 'glyphicon glyphicon-sort-by-attributes-alt'],
defaultRowHeight: 45
});
});
Column Definitions
The columns should be an array of Column Definition Objects. The order in which they appear in this array dictates the order they will appear by default. Column Definition Objects have the following properties:
property key | type | required | default value | description |
---|
id | string | yes | undefined | Identifies the column. |
key | string | yes | undefined | The field on each row that this column displays or uses in its format function. |
label | string | no | id | The column heading text. If not present, id is used. |
sort | function or string | no | undefined | If specified, defines row sort function this column uses. See Row Sorting below. |
filter | function or string | no | undefined | If specified, defines row filter function this column uses. See Row Filtering below. |
format | function or string | no | '' | If specified, defines cell format function. See the Cell Formatting section below. |
width | string or number | no | 'auto' | width of column, can include units, e.g. '30px' |
lockWidth | boolean | no | false | If true, column will not be resizable. |
ngFilter | string | no | undefined | Name of a registered filter to use on row[column.key] |
template | string | no | undefined | A string template for the cell contents. Scope variables available: row, column, options, toggleRowExpand, refreshExpandedHeight, rowIsExpanded |
templateUrl | string | no | undefined | A template url used with ng-include for cell contents |
title | string | no | undefined | A tooltip for a column header. |
Row Sorting
The rows of the table can be sortable based on a column by setting the sort
attribute of a Column Definition Object to a function with the following signature:
/**
* Defines sort function for ascending order.
* @param {Object} rowA First row being compared
* @param {Object} rowB Second row being compared
* @return {Number} Result of comparison.
*/
function MySortFunction(rowA, rowB) {
// Assuming propertyKey is numeric,
// this would work as a number sorter:
return rowA.propertyKey - rowB.propertyKey;
}
The returned value should mirror how Array.prototype.sort
works: If the returned value is negative, rowA will be placed above rowB in the ascending sort order. If it is negative, rowB will be placed above rowA in the ascending sort order. If it is zero, the two rows will be considered the same in terms of sorting precedence.
There are four built-in sort functions available which handle the most common use-cases: "string"
, "number"
, "stringFormatted"
, and "numberFormatted"
. To use these, simply set the sort
attribute to one of these strings.
Sorting can be set by the user by clicking the headers of sortable columns, and can be stacked by holding shift and clicking. The initial sort order can be set using the initialSorts
option in the Options Object, shown in the table above.
Row Filtering
If a filter
function is set on a Column Definition Object, that column will contain an input field below the main column header where the user can type in a value and the rows will be filtered based on what they type and the behavior of the function. This function should have the following signature:
/**
* Defines a filtering function
* @param {String} term The term entered by the user into the filter field.
* @param {Mixed} value The value of row[column.key]
* @param {Mixed} computedValue The value of column.format(row[column.key], row). Will be the same as `value` if there is no format function for the column.
* @param {Object} row The actual row of data
* @return {Boolean}
*/
function MyFilterFunction(term, value, computedValue, row) {
// Assuming row[column.key] is a string,
// this would work as a simple matching filter:
return value.indexOf(term) >= 0;
}
When there is a value provided by the user in the filter field, every row in the dataset is passed through this function. If the function returns true, the row will be included in the resulting rows that get displayed. Otherwise it is left out. To set placeholder text for the filter field, simply add a placeholder
attribute directly to the filter function. To add a title/tooltip, add a title
attribute, e.g.:
MyFilterFunction.placeholder = "enter text";
MyFilterFunction.title = "Perform a simple text search";
There are several common filter functions that are built-in. Use them by passing one of the following strings instead of a function:
string | description |
---|
like | Search by simple substring, eg. "foo" matches "foobar" but not "fobar". Use "!" to exclude and "=" to match exact text, e.g. "!bar" or "=baz". |
likeFormatted | Same as "like", but looks at formatted cell value instead of raw. |
number | Search by number, e.g. "123". Optionally use comparator expressions like ">=10" or "<1000". Use "~" for approx. int values, eg. "~3" will match "3.2". |
numberFormatted | Same as number, but looks at formatted cell value instead of raw |
date | Search by date. Enter a date string (RFC2822 or ISO 8601 date). You can also type "today", "yesterday", "> 2 days ago", "< 1 day 2 hours ago", etc. |
Cell Formatting
You can format the result of row[key]
by specifying a format
function on the column definition object. For example, perhaps you want to add a dollar sign to a column which represents an amount of money:
var columns = [
{
key: 'price',
format: function(price) {
return '$' + price.toFixed(2);
}
}
];
var rows = [
{ price: 12 },
{ price: 14 }
];
Row Selection
There is a special type of column called a selector, which will render as a checkbox that, when clicked, will populate a selected
array that is provided through an attribute of the ap-mesa
element. The following is an example column definition for a selector (Usually this column appears first):
$scope.myColumns = [
{
id: 'selector',
key: 'idKeyOfObjects', // used to populate the selected array
label: '', // no label for checkbox column
selector: true,
width: '40px', // Fixed width of 40px
lockWidth: true, // to keep it narrow
selectObject: true // Optional: by default, selecting a row puts the value of
// row[idKeyOfObjects] into the selected array. If this option
// is set to true, the entire object will be placed into the
// selected array.
}
]
Expandable Rows
To use the expandable rows feature, you will need to specify an expandableTemplate
or expandableTemplateUrl
and call toggleRowExpand()
from a custom column template. For example, a column definition may look like:
$scope.tableOptions = {
expandableTemplate: '<h3>Row Details:</h3> <pre>{{ row | json }}</pre>'
};
$scope.tableColumns = [
{
id: 'foo',
key: 'foo',
template: '<a href="" ng-click="toggleRowExpand()">CLICK TO {{ rowIsExpanded ? 'COLLAPSE' : 'EXPAND' }}</a>'
},
...
];
As shown above, there will also be a property on the row scope called rowIsExpanded
which is a boolean indicating if the row's panel is expanded.
It's also recommended to make the rowPadding
option at least as large as the expected pixel height of the expanded panels.
For a complete example, please check out /app/scripts/controllers/expandable.js
.
If the content of the panel is dynamic and changes height, there is a method in the row scope called refreshExpandedHeight
which should
be called when the height has changed.
Browser Support
IE 9+
Firefox 4+
Safari 5+
Chrome 5+