spatie / vue-table-component

A straight to the point Vue component to display tables
http://vue-table-component.spatie.be
MIT License
588 stars 149 forks source link
component html table vue

🚨 THIS PACKAGE HAS BEEN ABANDONED 🚨

We don't use this package anymore in our own projects and cannot justify the time needed to maintain it anymore. That's why we have chosen to abandon it. Feel free to fork our code and maintain your own copy or use one of the many alternatives.

A straightforward Vue component to filter and sort tables

Latest Version on NPM Software License Build Status npm


🚨 WARNING: FEATURE FREEZE 🚨

Version 1 of this package has become very hard to maintain due to the way it's built up. We also have too many feature requests, which we can't all cater too. We're working on v2 of this package, and won't be adding any new features or accepting feature PR's for v1.


This repo contains a Vue component that can render a filterable and sortable table. It aims to be very lightweight and easy to use. It has support for retrieving data asynchronously and pagination.

Here's an example of how you can use it:

<table-component
     :data="[
          { firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Lennon', instrument: 'Guitar', birthday: '04/10/1940', songs: 72 },
          { firstName: 'Paul', lastName: 'McCartney', instrument: 'Bass', birthday: '18/06/1942', songs: 70 },
          { firstName: 'George', lastName: 'Harrison', instrument: 'Guitar', birthday: '25/02/1943', songs: 22 },
          { firstName: 'Ringo', lastName: 'Starr', instrument: 'Drums', birthday: '07/07/1940', songs: 2 },
     ]"
     sort-by="songs"
     sort-order="asc"
>
     <table-column show="firstName" label="First name"></table-column>
     <table-column show="lastName" label="Last name"></table-column>
     <table-column show="instrument" label="Instrument"></table-column>
     <table-column show="songs" label="Songs" data-type="numeric"></table-column>
     <table-column show="birthday" label="Birthday" data-type="date:DD/MM/YYYY"></table-column>
     <table-column label="" :sortable="false" :filterable="false">
         <template slot-scope="row">
            <a :href="https://github.com/spatie/vue-table-component/blob/master/`#${row.firstName}`">Edit</a>
         </template>
     </table-column>
 </table-component>

A cool feature is that the table caches the used filter and sorting for 15 minutes. So if you refresh the page, the filter and sorting will still be used.

Demo

Want to see the component in action? No problem. Here's a demo.

Installation

You can install the package via yarn:

yarn add vue-table-component

or npm:

npm install vue-table-component --save

Next, you must register the component. The most common use case is to do that globally.

//in your app.js or similar file
import Vue from 'vue';
import { TableComponent, TableColumn } from 'vue-table-component';

Vue.component('table-component', TableComponent);
Vue.component('table-column', TableColumn);

Alternatively you can do this to register the components:

import TableComponent from 'vue-table-component';

Vue.use(TableComponent);

Browser Support

vue-table-component has the same browser support as Vue (see https://github.com/vuejs/vue). However, you might need to polyfill the Array.prototype.find method for IE support.

Usage

Here's a simple example on how to use the component.

<table-component
     :data="[
     { firstName: 'John', birthday: '04/10/1940', songs: 72 },
     { firstName: 'Paul', birthday: '18/06/1942', songs: 70 },
     { firstName: 'George', birthday: '25/02/1943', songs: 22 },
     { firstName: 'Ringo', birthday: '07/07/1940', songs: 2 },
     ]"
     sort-by="songs"
     sort-order="asc"
     >
     <table-column show="firstName" label="First name"></table-column>
     <table-column show="songs" label="Songs" data-type="numeric"></table-column>
     <table-column show="birthday" label="Birthday" :filterable="false" data-type="date:DD/MM/YYYY"></table-column>
 </table-component>

This will render a table that is both filterable and sortable. A filter field will be displayed right above the table. If your data contains any html we will filter that out when filtering. You can sort the table by clicking on the column headers. By default it will remember the used filter and sorting for the next 15 minutes.

Props

You can pass these props to table-component:

For each table-column a column will be rendered. It can have these props:

Listeners

The table-component currently emits one custom event:

Modifying the used texts and CSS classes

If you want to modify the built in text or classes you can pass settings globally. You can use the CSS from the docs as a starting point for your own styling.

import TableComponent from 'vue-table-component';

TableComponent.settings({
    tableClass: '',
    theadClass: '',
    tbodyClass: '',
    filterPlaceholder: 'Filter table…',
    filterNoResults: 'There are no matching rows',
});

You can also provide the custom settings on Vue plugin install hook:

import Vue from 'vue';
import TableComponent from 'vue-table-component';

Vue.use(TableComponent, {
    tableClass: '',
    theadClass: '',
    tbodyClass: '',
    filterPlaceholder: 'Filter table…',
    filterNoResults: 'There are no matching rows',
});

Retrieving data asynchronously

The component can fetch data in an asynchronous manner. The most common use case for this is fetching data from a server.

To use the feature you should pass a function to the data prop. The function will receive an object with filter, sort and page. You can use these parameters to fetch the right data. The function should return an object with the following properties:

Here's an example:

<template>
   <div id="app">
       <table-component :data="fetchData">
           <table-column show="firstName" label="First name"></table-column>
       </table-component>
   </div>
</template>

<script>
    import axios from 'axios';

    export default {
        methods: {
            async fetchData({ page, filter, sort }) {
                const response = await axios.get('/my-endpoint', { page });

                // An object that has a `data` and an optional `pagination` property
                return response;
            }
        }
    }
</script>

If you for some reason need to manually refresh the table data, you can call the refresh method on the component.

<table-component :data="fetchData" ref="table">
    <!-- Columns... -->
</table-component>
this.$refs.table.refresh();

Formatting values

You can format values before they get displayed by using scoped slots. Here's a quick example:

<table-component
     :data="[
          { firstName: 'John', songs: 72 },
          { firstName: 'Paul', songs: 70 },
          { firstName: 'George', songs: 22 },
          { firstName: 'Ringo', songs: 2 },
     ]"
>

     <table-column label="My custom column" :sortable="false" :filterable="false">
         <template slot-scope="row">
            {{ row.firstName }} wrote {{ row.songs }} songs.
         </template>
     </table-column>
 </table-component>

Alternatively you can pass a function to the formatter prop. Here's an example Vue component that uses the feature.

<template>
    <table-component
        :data="[{ firstName: 'John' },{ firstName: 'Paul' }]">
        <table-column show="firstName" label="First name" :formatter="formatter"></table-column>
    </table-component>
</template>

<script>
export default {
    methods: {
        formatter(value, rowProperties) {
            return `Hi, I am ${value}`;
        },
    },
}
</script>

This will display values Hi, I am John and Hi, I am Paul.

Adding table footer <tfoot> information

Sometimes it can be useful to add information to the bottom of the table like summary data. A slot named tfoot is available and it receives all of the rows data to do calculations on the fly or you can show data directly from whatever is available in the parent scope.

<table-component
    :data="[{ firstName: 'John', songs: 72 },{ firstName: 'Paul', songs: 70 }]">
    <table-column show="firstName" label="First name"></table-column>
    <table-column show="songs" label="Songs" data-type="numeric"></table-column>
    <template slot="tfoot" slot-scope="{ rows }">
        <tr>
            <th>Total Songs:</th>
            <th>{{ rows.reduce((sum, value) => { return sum + value.data.songs; }, 0) }}</th>
            <th>&nbsp;</th>
            <th>&nbsp;</th>
        </tr>
    </template>
</table-component>

OR

<template>
    <table-component
        :data="tableData">
        <table-column show="firstName" label="First name"></table-column>
        <table-column show="songs" label="Songs" data-type="numeric"></table-column>
        <template slot="tfoot">
            <tr>
                <th>Total Songs:</th>
                <th>{{ totalSongs }}</th>
            </tr>
        </template>
    </table-component>
</template>
<script>
export default {
    computed: {
        totalSongs () {
            return this.tableData.reduce(sum, value => {
                return sum + value.songs;
            }, 0);
        }
    },
    data () {
        return {
            tableData: [{ firstName: 'John', songs: 72 },{ firstName: 'Paul', songs: 70 }]
        }
    }
}
</script>

Note: rows slot scope data includes more information gathered by the Table Component (e.g. columns) and rows.data is where the original data information is located.

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.

Testing

yarn test

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Postcardware

You're free to use this package, but if it makes it to your production environment we highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.

Our address is: Spatie, Samberstraat 69D, 2060 Antwerp, Belgium.

We publish all received postcards on our company website.

Security

If you discover any security related issues, please contact freek@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.

Credits

The Pagination component was inspired by this lesson on Laracasts.com.

Support us

Spatie is a webdesign agency based in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.

Does your business depend on our contributions? Reach out and support us on Patreon. All pledges will be dedicated to allocating workforce on maintenance and new awesome stuff.

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.