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treetabular
Advanced tools
treetabular
provides tree helpers for Reactabular. It relies on a flat structure like this:
const tree = [
{
id: 123,
name: 'Demo'
},
{
id: 456,
name: 'Another',
parent: 123
},
{
id: 789,
name: 'Yet Another',
parent: 123
},
{
id: 532,
name: 'Foobar'
}
];
If there's a parent
relation, the children must follow their parent right after it.
You can find suggested default styling for the package at
style.css
in the package root.
import * as tree from 'treetabular';
// Or you can cherry-pick
import { filter } from 'treetabular';
import { filter as filterTree } from 'treetabular';
tree.collapseAll = ({ property = 'showingChildren' }) => (rows) => [<collapsedRow>]
Collapses rows by setting showingChildren
of each row to false
.
tree.expandAll = ({ property = 'showingChildren' }) => (rows) => [<expandedRow>]
Expands rows by setting showingChildren
of each row to true
.
tree.filter = ({ fieldName, parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<filteredRow>]
Filters the given rows using fieldName
. This is handy if you want only rows that are visible assuming visibility logic has been defined.
tree.getLevel = ({ index, parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => <level>
Returns the nesting level of the row at the given index
within rows
.
tree.getChildren = ({ index, idField = 'id', parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<child>]
Returns children based on given rows
and index
. This includes children of children.
tree.getImmediateChildren = ({ index, idField = 'id', parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<child>]
Returns immediate children based on given rows
and index
.
tree.getParents = ({ index, parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<parent>]
Returns parents based on given rows
and index
.
tree.hasChildren = ({ index, idField = 'id', parentField = 'parent '}) => (rows) => <boolean>
Returns a boolean based on whether or not the row at the given index
has children.
tree.search = ({ operation: (rows) => [<row>], idField = 'id', parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<searchedRow>]
Searches against a tree structure using operation
while matching against children too. If children are found, associated parents are returned as well. This has been designed to searchtabular multipleColumns
and singleColumn
, but as long as the passed operation follows the interface, it should fit in.
This depends on resolve.index!
tree.wrap = ({ operations: [rows => rows], idField = 'id' }) => (rows) => [<operatedRow>]
If you want to perform an operation, such as sorting, against the root rows of a tree, use tree.wrap
.
Example:
wrap({
operations: [
sorter({
columns,
sortingColumns,
sort: orderBy
})
]
})(rows);
tree.pack = ({ parentField = 'parent', childrenField = 'children', idField = 'id' }) => (rows) => [<packedRow>]
Packs children inside root level nodes. This is useful with sorting and filtering.
tree.unpack = ({ parentField = 'parent', childrenField = 'children', idField = 'id', parent }) => (rows) => [<unpackedRow>]
Unpacks children from root level nodes. This is useful with sorting and filtering.
tree.moveRows = ({ operation: (rows) => [<row>], retain = [], idField = 'id', parentField = 'parent' }) => (rows) => [<movedRow>]
Allows moving tree rows while retain
ing given fields at their original rows. You should pass an operation
that performs actual moving here. reactabular-dnd moveRows
is one option.
tree.toggleChildren = ({ getRows, getShowingChildren, toggleShowingChildren, props, idField, parentField }) => (value, extra) => <React element>
Makes it possible to toggle node children through a user interface.
This depends on resolve.index!
/*
import React from 'react';
import cloneDeep from 'lodash/cloneDeep';
import { compose } from 'redux';
import * as resolve from 'table-resolver';
import VisibilityToggles from 'reactabular-visibility-toggles';
import * as Table from 'reactabular-table';
import * as tree from 'treetabular';
import * as search from 'searchtabular';
import * as sort from 'sortabular';
import {
generateParents, generateRows
} from './helpers';
*/
const schema = {
type: 'object',
properties: {
id: {
type: 'string'
},
name: {
type: 'string'
},
age: {
type: 'integer'
}
},
required: ['id', 'name', 'age']
};
class TreeTable extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
const columns = this.getColumns();
const rows = resolve.resolve(
{
columns,
method: resolve.index
}
)(
generateParents(generateRows(100, schema))
);
this.state = {
searchColumn: 'all',
query: {},
sortingColumns: null,
rows,
columns
};
this.onExpandAll = this.onExpandAll.bind(this);
this.onCollapseAll = this.onCollapseAll.bind(this);
this.onToggleColumn = this.onToggleColumn.bind(this);
}
getColumns() {
const sortable = sort.sort({
// Point the transform to your rows. React state can work for this purpose
// but you can use a state manager as well.
getSortingColumns: () => this.state.sortingColumns || {},
// The user requested sorting, adjust the sorting state accordingly.
// This is a good chance to pass the request through a sorter.
onSort: selectedColumn => {
const sortingColumns = sort.byColumns({
sortingColumns: this.state.sortingColumns,
selectedColumn
});
this.setState({ sortingColumns });
}
});
return [
{
property: 'name',
props: {
style: { width: 200 }
},
header: {
label: 'Name',
transforms: [sortable]
},
cell: {
formatters: [
tree.toggleChildren({
getRows: () => this.state.rows,
getShowingChildren: ({ rowData }) => rowData.showingChildren,
toggleShowingChildren: rowIndex => {
const rows = cloneDeep(this.state.rows);
rows[rowIndex].showingChildren = !rows[rowIndex].showingChildren;
this.setState({ rows });
},
// Inject custom class name per row here etc.
props: {}
})
]
},
visible: true
},
{
property: 'age',
props: {
style: { width: 300 }
},
header: {
label: 'Age',
transforms: [sortable]
},
visible: true
}
];
}
render() {
const {
searchColumn, columns, sortingColumns, query
} = this.state;
const visibleColumns = columns.filter(column => column.visible);
const rows = compose(
tree.filter({ fieldName: 'showingChildren' }),
tree.wrap({
operations: [
sort.sorter({
columns,
sortingColumns
})
]
}),
tree.search({
operation: search.multipleColumns({ columns, query })
})
)(this.state.rows);
return (
<div>
<VisibilityToggles
columns={columns}
onToggleColumn={this.onToggleColumn}
/>
<button onClick={this.onExpandAll}>Expand all</button>
<button onClick={this.onCollapseAll}>Collapse all</button>
<div className="search-container">
<span>Search</span>
<search.Field
column={searchColumn}
query={query}
columns={visibleColumns}
rows={rows}
onColumnChange={searchColumn => this.setState({ searchColumn })}
onChange={query => this.setState({ query })}
/>
</div>
<Table.Provider
className="pure-table pure-table-striped"
columns={visibleColumns}
>
<Table.Header />
<Table.Body rows={rows} rowKey="id" />
</Table.Provider>
</div>
);
}
onExpandAll() {
this.setState({
rows: tree.expandAll()(this.state.rows)
});
}
onCollapseAll() {
this.setState({
rows: tree.collapseAll()(this.state.rows)
});
}
onToggleColumn({ columnIndex }) {
const columns = cloneDeep(this.state.columns);
columns[columnIndex].visible = !columns[columnIndex].visible;
this.setState({ columns });
}
}
<TreeTable />
MIT. See LICENSE for details.
FAQs
Tree utilities
The npm package treetabular receives a total of 562 weekly downloads. As such, treetabular popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that treetabular 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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