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Create server- or client-side bootstrap data tables

Package Exports

  • vue-tables

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (vue-tables) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

Vue Tables

This Vue component offers an easy and intuitive way of creating and displaying data tables with data coming from the client or from the server using AJAX requests. It includes all the usual features: a search field, limit select, total records, sorting and pagination. The Styling is based on Bootstrap, but of course you can write your own.

Dependencies

  • JQuery. Required.
  • Vue.js. Required.
  • Bootstrap (CSS). Optional.
  • Font Awesome (for the sort icons). Optional.

Installation

Option 1

npm install vue-tables

Require the script:

var VueTables = require('vue-tables');

Option 2

Simply import the compiled standalone file into your HTML, which will expose a global VueTables variable.

Usage

Register the component(s)

Vue.use(VueTables.client);
Vue.use(VueTables.server);

Client Side

Add the following element to your page wherever you want it to render. Make sure to wrap it with a parent element you can latch your vue instance into.

<div id="people">
  <v-client-table></v-client-table>
</div>

Create a new Vue instance. An example works best to illustrate the syntax:

new Vue({
  el:"#people",
  data: {
    tableData: [
      {id:1, name:"John",age:"20"},
      {id:2, name:"Jane",age:"24"},
      {id:3, name:"Susan",age:"16"},
      {id:4, name:"Chris",age:"55"},
      {id:5, name:"Dan",age:"40"}
    ],
    headings: {
      id:'ID',
      name:'Name',
      age:'Age'
    }
  }
});

Note: you must pass an id field as it is used to track the data for faster rendering. Of course you don't have to show it. See below the columns option.

Check out the live demo

Server side

HTML:

<div id="people">
  <v-server-table></v-server-table>
</div>

Javascript:

new Vue({
    el:"#people",
    url:"/people"
      headings: {
        id:'ID',
        name:'Name',
        age:'Age'
      }
    }
  });

All the data is passed as GET parameters. You need to return JSON encoded associative array of two items: data and count. Here is an implemenation in Laravel:

extract(Input::all());

$fields = ['id',age','name'];

$direction = $ascending==1?"ASC":"DESC";

$people = Person::select($fields);

if ($query) {
  foreach ($fields as $index=>$field) {
    $method = $index?"orWhere":"where";
    $people = $people->{$method}($field,'LIKE',"%{$query}%");
  }

}

$count = $people->count();

$people->limit($limit)
      ->skip($limit * ($page-1))
      ->orderBy($orderBy,$direction);

return ['data'=>$people->get(),
       'count'=>$count];

Options

columns Array

By default all columns passed as data will be displayed. If you want to set explicitly which columns will show use this option.

templates Object

Use this to wrap your cell content with a template using wildcards:

templates: {
  name:"<a href='{id}'>{name}</a>"
}

extras Object

Similar to templates, but adds extra column(s). For example:

extras: {
  edit:"<a href='{id}'>{name}</a>"
}

texts Object

This option allows you to override the defaults texts for localization or otherwise. It defaults to:

texts:{
  count:"{count} Records",
  filter:"Filter Results:",
  filterPlaceholder:"Search query",
  limit:"Records:"
}

sortable Array

By Default all columns but extras are sortable. Use this option to explicitly state which columns should be sortable. For obvious reasons server-side extras cannot be sorted.

dateFormat String (client-side only)

When passing dates to the client-side component pass a Date object rather than a plain string.

This results in two benefits:

  1. Dates are always correctly sorted regardless of their presentation.
  2. You are not hardcoding the format into each date property.

By default date will be presented using the native toLocaleDateString() function. To override this behaviour specify your own format:

{
    dateFormat: "M-Y" // e.g "11-2015"
}

The conventions are:

Date:

d - Day without leading zeros.

D - Day including leading zeros.

m - Month without leading zeros.

M - Month with leading zeros

Y or y - full year

Time (separate from date by a single space):

g - 12-hour format of an hour without leading zeros

G - 24-hour format of an hour without leading zeros

h - 12-hour format of an hour with leading zeros 01 through 12

H - 24-hour format of an hour with leading zeros 00 through 23

i - Minutes with leading zeros

s - Seconds, with leading zeros

Spearators:

Date: -,.,/ Time : :

If an invalid format was passed it will resort to the default format and spit out a warning to the console.


CSS Note: to center the pagination apply text-align:center to the wrapping element