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selectabular
Advanced tools
Common functionalities when dealing with table rows.
import * as select from 'selectabular';
// Or you can cherry-pick
import { all } from 'selectabular';
import { all as selectAll } from 'selectabular';
select.all(rows) => [<row>]
rows
is an array where each row has a .selected=true
attributeselect.none(rows) => [<row>]
rows
is an array where each row has a .selected=false
attributeselect.rows(filter)(rows) => { rows: [<row>], selectedRows: [<matchingRow>]}
Given a filter, it will select the matching rows and return them:
const initRows = [
{ id: 10, selected: true, product: 'apple', company: 'Apple Inc', price: 1.5, stock: 300 },
{ id: 11, product: 'pear', company: 'Pear Inc', price: 3, stock: 1000 },
{ id: 12, product: 'grape', company: 'Grapesoft', price: 22.1, stock: 18 },
{ id: 13, product: 'banana', company: 'Banana Tech', price: 12, stock: 9 }
];
const myfilter = row => row.price > 5
const {rows, selectedRows: result } = selectabular.rows(myfilter)(initRows);
>> result
[
{ id: 12, product: 'grape', company: 'Grapesoft', price: 22.1, stock: 18 },
{ id: 13, product: 'banana', company: 'Banana Tech', price: 12, stock: 9 }
];
>> rows
[
{ id: 10, selected: true, product: 'apple', company: 'Apple Inc', price: 1.5, stock: 300 },
{ id: 11, product: 'pear', company: 'Pear Inc', price: 3, stock: 1000 },
{ id: 12, selected: true, product: 'grape', company: 'Grapesoft', price: 22.1, stock: 18 },
{ id: 13, selected: true, product: 'banana', company: 'Banana Tech', price: 12, stock: 9 }
];
Important!
rows
does not toggle the rows that do not match the filter; please use select.none
a priori for that.rows
, and selectedRows
are internal variable names, used in the implementation; which can be easily renamed inline (See example where selectedRows
is renamed to result
)select.toggle(filter)(rows) => [<row>]
selected
attribute.const initRows = [
{ id: 10, selected: false, product: 'apple', company: 'Apple Inc', price: 1.5, stock: 300 },
{ id: 11, selected: true, product: 'pear', company: 'Pear Inc', price: 3, stock: 1000 },
{ id: 12, product: 'grape', company: 'Grapesoft', price: 22.1, stock: 18 },
{ id: 13, product: 'banana', company: 'Banana Tech', price: 12, stock: 9 }
];
const filter = row => row.id < 12
const result = selectabular.toggle(filter)(initRows);
>> result
[
{ id: 10, selected: true, product: 'apple', company: 'Apple Inc', price: 1.5, stock: 300 },
{ id: 11, selected: false, product: 'pear', company: 'Pear Inc', price: 3, stock: 1000 },
{ id: 12, product: 'grape', company: 'Grapesoft', price: 22.1, stock: 18 },
{ id: 13, product: 'banana', company: 'Banana Tech', price: 12, stock: 9 }
];
There's a single React specific helper that makes it easier to track up/down arrows. The API consists of a single higher order function: select.byArrowKeys({ rows: <rows>, selectedRowIndex: <number>, onSelectRow: (selectedRowIndex) => <any>})(<React element>) => <React element>
If there is a selection (selectedRowIndex
), then it triggers onSelectRow
with the new selectedRowIndex
which you can then use to update your selection state.
The following example illustrates how to use the functionality with a Reactabular based table. Selection is tracked per row to comply with Reactabular's strict shouldComponentUpdate
. This allows it to tell apart the rows that have changed while maintaining good performance.
You can select a row by clicking in the following example. If there's a selection, you can move up and down using the arrow keys.
/*
import React from 'react';
import classnames from 'classnames';
import cloneDeep from 'lodash/cloneDeep';
import find from 'lodash/find';
import findIndex from 'lodash/findIndex';
import { compose } from 'redux';
import * as Table from 'reactabular-table';
import * as select from 'selectabular';
*/
const rows = [
{
id: 100,
name: 'Adam',
age: 55
},
{
id: 102,
name: 'Joe',
age: 12
},
{
id: 101,
name: 'Brian',
age: 62
},
{
id: 103,
name: 'Mike',
age: 22
},
{
id: 104,
name: 'Jack',
age: 33
}
];
const columns = [
{
property: 'name',
header: {
label: 'Name'
}
},
{
property: 'age',
header: {
label: 'Age'
}
}
];
class SelectionTable extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
rows,
columns,
selectedRows: []
};
this.onRow = this.onRow.bind(this);
this.onSelectRow = this.onSelectRow.bind(this);
this.getSelectedRowIndex = this.getSelectedRowIndex.bind(this);
}
render() {
const { columns, rows, selectedRows } = this.state;
const selectedRowIndex = this.getSelectedRowIndex(selectedRows);
return select.byArrowKeys({
rows,
selectedRowIndex,
onSelectRow: this.onSelectRow
})(
<div>
<Table.Provider
className="pure-table pure-table-striped"
columns={columns}
>
<Table.Header />
<Table.Body
rows={rows}
rowKey="id"
onRow={this.onRow}
/>
<tfoot>
<tr>
<td>Selected: {selectedRows[0] && selectedRows[0].name}</td>
<td></td>
</tr>
</tfoot>
</Table.Provider>
</div>
);
}
onRow(row, { rowIndex }) {
return {
className: classnames(
rowIndex % 2 ? 'odd-row' : 'even-row',
row.selected && 'selected-row'
),
onClick: () => this.onSelectRow(rowIndex)
};
}
onSelectRow(selectedRowIndex) {
const { rows } = this.state;
const selectedRowId = rows[selectedRowIndex].id;
this.setState(
compose(
select.rows(row => row.id === selectedRowId),
select.none
)(rows)
);
}
getSelectedRowIndex(selectedRows) {
return findIndex(this.state.rows, {
id: selectedRows[0] && selectedRows[0].id
});
}
}
<SelectionTable />
MIT. See LICENSE for details.
FAQs
Selection utilities
The npm package selectabular receives a total of 363 weekly downloads. As such, selectabular popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that selectabular demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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