A set of jQuery plugins for responsive tables.
The Stack Table stacks the table headers to a two column layout with headers on the left when the viewport width is less than 40em
(640px
).
<table class="tablesaw tablesaw-stack" data-tablesaw-mode="stack">
If you only want to use the Stack Table and don’t want all the extra features below (save yourself some bytes), Tablesaw provides a Stack-Only version.
To opt-out of inline label creation (the table header cell text that shows at small breakpoints) on a per-table basis, use <table data-tablesaw-no-labels>
; on a per-row basis, use <tr data-tablesaw-no-labels>
.
The Column Toggle Table allows the user to select which columns they want to be visible.
<table data-tablesaw-mode="columntoggle">
Table headers must have a data-tablesaw-priority
attribute to be eligible to toggle. data-tablesaw-priority
is a numeric value from 1 to 6, which determine default breakpoints at which a column will show. The breakpoint defaults are:
<th data-tablesaw-priority="persist"><!-- Not eligible for toggle, always shows --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="1"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 20em) (320px) --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="2"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 30em) (480px) --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="3"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 40em) (640px) --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="4"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 50em) (800px) --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="5"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 60em) (960px) --></th>
<th data-tablesaw-priority="6"><!-- Shows at (min-width: 70em) (1120px) --></th>
Keep in mind that the priorities are not exclusive—multiple columns can reuse the same priority value.
<table data-tablesaw-mode="columntoggle" data-tablesaw-minimap>
Allows the user to use the swipe gesture (or use the left and right buttons) to navigate the columns.
<table data-tablesaw-mode="swipe">
Columns also respect the data-tablesaw-priority="persist"
attribute.
<th data-tablesaw-priority="persist"><!-- Always shows --></th>
<table data-tablesaw-mode="swipe" data-tablesaw-minimap>
Add a Tablesaw config
object after including the Tablesaw JavaScript.
Tablesaw.config = {
swipe: {
horizontalThreshold: 15,
verticalThreshold: 20
}
};
Use data-tablesaw-minimap
to add a series of small dots to show which columns are currently visible and which are hidden. Only available on swipe
and columntoggle
tables. Examples available above.
<table data-tablesaw-mode-switch>
<!-- With a different default mode -->
<table data-tablesaw-mode="swipe" data-tablesaw-mode-switch>
<!-- Exclude a mode from the switcher -->
<table data-tablesaw-mode-switch data-tablesaw-mode-exclude="columntoggle">
The “sortable” option allows the user to sort the the table data by clicking on the table headers. Since all the columns may not be visible on smaller breakpoints (or not there at all if using the “stack” table mode), relying solely on the column headers to choose the table sort isn’t practical. To address this, there is an optional data-tablesaw-sortable-switch
attribute on the table that adds a select menu auto-populated with the names of each column in the table with options for choosing ascending or descending sort direction. Data options on table headers can be used to control which columns are sortable (data-tablesaw-sortable-col
) and the default sort order (data-tablesaw-sortable-default-col
).
<table data-tablesaw-sortable>
<thead>
<tr>
<!-- Default column -->
<th data-tablesaw-sortable-col data-tablesaw-sortable-default-col>Rank</th>
<th data-tablesaw-sortable-col>Movie Title</th>
<th data-tablesaw-sortable-col data-sortable-numeric>Year</th>
<th data-tablesaw-sortable-col data-sortable-numeric><abbr title="Rotten Tomato Rating">Rating</abbr></th>
<!-- Unsortable column -->
<th>Reviews</th>
</tr>
</thead>
...
Use data-tablesaw-sortable-switch
to add a select form element to manually choose the sort order.
<table data-tablesaw-sortable data-tablesaw-sortable-switch>
We also provide the option to specify Custom Sort functions on individual columns (working example). In the contrived example below, we want to sort full dates (e.g. 12/02/2014
) just on the year.
// Add a data function to the table header cell
$( "th#custom-sort" ).data( "tablesaw-sort", function( ascending ) {
// return a function
return function( a, b ) {
// use a.cell and b.cell for cell values
var dateA = a.cell.split( "/" ),
dateB = b.cell.split( "/" ),
yearA = parseInt( dateA[ 2 ], 10 ),
yearB = parseInt( dateB[ 2 ], 10 );
if( ascending ) {
return yearA > yearB;
} else { // descending
return yearA < yearB;
}
};
});
All of the above options combined into a single table.
TableSaw requires Respond.js for IE8- support.
As shown above, we provide a Stack-mode-only package of TableSaw. It’s a barebones version that doesn’t include any of the other features above.
<link rel="stylesheet" href="tablesaw.css">
<!--[if lt IE 9]><script src="dependencies/respond.js"></script><!--<![endif]-->
<script src="tablesaw.js"></script>
And then:
<table class="tablesaw tablesaw-stack" data-tablesaw-mode="stack">
Check out the Stack-Only demo to see a working example.
To easily customize the breakpoint at which the stack table switches, use the SCSS mixin. First, include the tablesaw.stackonly.scss
file instead of tablesaw.stackonly.css
in your SASS. Then, use a parent selector on your table.
<div class="my-parent-selector">
<table class="tablesaw" data-tablesaw-mode="stack">
Include the mixin like so:
.my-parent-selector {
@include tablesaw-stack( 50em );
}
The argument to tablesaw-stack
is the breakpoint at which the table will switch from columns to stacked.
If you want the other modes, it’ll take a little bit more configuration.
<link rel="stylesheet" href="tablesaw.css">
<!--[if lt IE 9]><script src="dependencies/respond.js"></script><!--<![endif]-->
<script src="dependencies/jquery.js"></script>
<script src="tablesaw.js"></script>
Check out any of the demos above for complete working examples.
Tablesaw is designed to be a drop-in solution, providing table styles as well as responsive table functionality.
If you would like the full functionality of the TableSaw plugin. but the plugin's default table styles don't fit in with your project, use the tablesaw.bare.css
file instead of the standard tablesaw.css
file for a much lighter default style which is significantly easier to customize.
To see what all TableSaw functionality looks like with this alternate stylesheet applied.
Run npm install
to install dependencies and then grunt
to build the project files into the dist
folder.