Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

ember-railio-grid

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
4
Versions
24
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ember-railio-grid

Addon for an Ember grid component.

  • 0.0.31
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
4
decreased by-20%
Maintainers
4
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Ember-railio-grid

npm version Build Status Ember Observer Score Code Climate

An Ember addon to display a list of Objects, and be able to filter, sort and paginate this list. With build-in selection and be able to give actions for the selected objects.

Install

In your application's directory:

$ ember install ember-railio-grid

Basic usage

The grid can be used with an existing array of objects, or can be connected to the store to get the objects from the store.

In your Handlebars templates when using an existing list:

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties}}

When you want to get the content from the store, keep in mind you have to pass the store in your current project to the data-grid.

{{data-grid modelName="modelName"
            store=store
            properties=listProperties}}
Properties

The properties are the cols you want to show and their extra information like formatting and styling. It should be an array with objects for each property. At least it should contain key and label:

listProperties: [
  {
    key:   'name',
    label: 'First name'
  },
  {
    key:   'age',
    label: 'Age'
  }
]

It is possible to use multiple properties in just one cell by giving an array of keys. By default, without giving a custom format function, both values are shown seperated with a comma. See the example below for using your own format function. The format function gets the properties in the same order as you specify it in the key list.

listProperties: [
  {
    key:    ['firstName', 'lastName'],
    label:  'Name',
    format: function(first, last) {
      return `${last}, ${first}`;
    }
  }
]

If you want your cells to have some styling, you could add it to the property. The following styling options can be used inside the style object:

  • width (in em)
  • horizontalAlign
  • verticalAlign
  • backgroundColor
  • fontFamily
  • fontWeight
  • italic (boolean)
  • fontColor
  • borderWidth (in px)
  • borderColor
  • borderStyle
listProperties: [
  {
    key:    'name',
    label:  'Name',
    style: {
      width:           30,
      horizontalAlign: 'center',
      verticalAlign:   'top',
      backgroundColor: '#EFEFEF',
      fontFamily:      'Monospace',
      fontWeight:      '300',
      italic:          true,
      fontColor:       '#777',
      borderWidth:     2,
      borderColor:     'grey',
      borderStyle:     'dashed'
    }
  }
]

Instead of giving a fixed value, you could use a function to style the cell depending on it's value:

listProperties: [
  {
    key:    'total',
    label:  'Total',
    style: {
      backgroundColor: function(total) {
        if (total > 1000) { return 'green'; }
        if (total < 0)    { return 'red'; }
        return '#EFEFEF';
      }
    }
  },
  {
    key:    ['in', 'out'],
    label:  'diff',
    format: function(incoming, outgoing) {
      return incoming - outgoing;
    },
    style: {
      fontColor: function(incoming, outgoing) {
        if (incoming > outgoing) { return 'green'; }
        if (incoming < outgoing) { return 'red'; }
        return 'black';
      }
    }
  }
]
Paginating

The grid can be used to paginate the content. For a given content, it will use the build-in filterer. When using the api for getting the content, the api should handle the paginating. For now, there is just one paginator, but there will be more available in the future (or you could write your own). You are able to show the paginator on top, bottom, or both. Without a page size, the grid will show all content.

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            topPaginator="page-picker-paginator"
            bottomPaginator="page-picker-paginator"
            pageSize=20}}
Filtering

You could optional add a filtering bar, where you can filter the content by each col. For a given content, it will use the build-in filterer. When using the api for getting the content, the api should handle the filtering.

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            filterEnabled=true}}

Possible filter options:

  • equals
  • contains
  • is greater than
  • is greater than or equal to
  • is lower than
  • is lower than or equal to
  • starts with
  • ends with
Predefined filters

When you use the API data manger to load the data, you can add some predefined filters. These filters will be added to the request, just like the filters from the optional filter bar would.

filters: [
  {
    filter: 'gt', propertyPath: 'price', value: 50
  }
]

And can be passed to the grid like:

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            filters=filters}}
Sorting

The grid has a build-in sorting, or can be sorted from the store when using a model. Each property can be used to sort by clicking on it's header. The order of adding the sortings, will be the order for importancy. So the first added sorting will be the most important, even if it is changed from ASC to DESC. Only removing it and re-adding will change its importancy.

Actions

The grid has a build-in selection mechanism. You will be able to select specific rows when you have passed some actions (select-boxes appear when at least one action is passed). After selecting, you can use the passed actions for the selected items. The actions need to be a list like:

actionList: [
  {
    label:  'something',
    action: function(items) {
      // do something for each selected item
    }
  },
  {
    label:  'open',
    action: function(items) {
      // open the selected items
    }
  }
]

And can be passed to the grid like:

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            actionList=actionList}}
doubleClick action

You could also pass a doubleClickAction, which will be called after double-clicking a row. It passes the object of that row to the function.

  editObject(object) {
    // do something with this object
  }

And can be passed to the grid like:

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            doubleClickAction=editObject}}
Selection

The grid has a build-in selection mechanism. Instead of that, you could use your own. You need to pass an array with the selected items, and three functions to select and deselect the items:

  • toggleItem to select / deselect a single item: gets the clicked item
  • selectPage to select the current page: gets an array of the items on the current page
  • clearSelection to clear your selection

You could pass it like:

{{data-grid content=list
            properties=listProperties
            selection=selection
            toggleItem=(action "selectItem")
            selectPage=(action "selectCurrentPage")
            clearSelection=(action "clearSelect")}}

If you want to use the build-in selection mechanism, but without using an actionList, you can pass the following property:

  • selectionEnabled

You can use the selection outside the addon by passing an empty array by the following name. Use this at your own risk.

  • _selection
Component Injection

You are able to inject a component into the grid, which will display that component instead of the value of that field. The value, object and propertyPath will be passed into the injected component by default, to use this function you have these two options:

  • component is the name of the component you want to inject.
  • componentProperties are the properties you want to pass along with it.
listProperties: [
  {
    key:                 'name',
    label:               'First name',
    component:           'foo-bar',
    componentProperties: ['foo', 'bar', 100]
  }
]

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 08 Mar 2019

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc