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treetabular
Advanced tools
treetabular
provides tree helpers for Reactabular. It allows you to set up collapsible rows that can contain more collapsible ones while remaining within a table format.
To achieve this, treetabular
relies on a flat structure that contains the hierarchy:
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 might use fixOrder
helper function if your data does not meet that criteria).
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, idField = 'parentId', 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, idField = 'parentId', 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, idField = 'parentId', 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 = 'id', parentField }) => (value, extra) => <React element>
Makes it possible to toggle node children through a user interface.
This depends on resolve.index!
tree.fixOrder = ({ parentField = 'parent', idField = 'id' }) => (rows) => [<rows in correct order>]
If children in your rows don't follow their parents you can use that helper method so they will be moved into right place.
Basically it converts [ parent, x, y, z, children ]
into [ parent, children, x, y, z ]
.
/*
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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