This module is an effort to implement Material Design data tables in Angular Material. I hope that this module will serve as a temporary solution to those who need this functionality and also serve as a playground, or lessons learned, when developing an official solution.
Specification for Material Design data tables can be found here.
- Voting
- Demo
- License
- Installation
- Usage
- Change Log
- API Documentation
- [Contributing] (#contributing)
Voting is my attempt to receive more organized feedback from the community on how new features should work or how existing features should be changed. This was inspired by the different request for how row selection should work. This may be the only time I do this but it may be useful again in the future.
I ask that you visit any issues below and follow the instructions for voting for or against it.
http://danielnagy.me/md-data-table
Here is a fork-able Codepen of the demo application. Please use this to reproduce any issues you may be experiencing.
This software is provided free of change and without restriction under the MIT License
This package is installable through the Bower package manager.
bower install angular-material-data-table --save
In your index.html
file, include the data table module and style sheet.
<!-- style sheet -->
<link href="bower_components/angular-material-data-table/dist/md-data-table.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"/>
<!-- module -->
<script type="text/javascript" src="bower_components/angular-material-data-table/dist/md-data-table.min.js"></script>
Include the md.data.table
module as a dependency in your application.
angular.module('myApp', ['md.data.table', 'ngMaterial']);
In addition, this package may be installed using npm.
npm install angular-material-data-table --save
You may use Browserify to inject this module into your application.
angular.module('myApp', [require('angular-material-data-table')]);
Tested in IE 10 and on IOS 7.
controller
angular.module('nutritionApp').controller('nutritionController', ['$nutrition', '$scope', function ($nutrition, $scope) {
'use strict';
$scope.selected = [];
$scope.query = {
filter: '',
order: 'name',
limit: 5,
page: 1
};
function success(desserts) {
$scope.desserts = desserts;
}
// in the future we may see a few built in alternate headers but in the mean time
// you can implement your own search header and do something like
$scope.search = function (predicate) {
$scope.filter = predicate;
$scope.deferred = $nutrition.desserts.get($scope.query, success).$promise;
};
$scope.onOrderChange = function (order) {
return $nutrition.desserts.get($scope.query, success).$promise;
};
$scope.onPaginationChange = function (page, limit) {
return $nutrition.desserts.get($scope.query, success).$promise;
};
}]);
markup
<md-data-table-toolbar>
<h2 class="md-title">Nutrition</h2>
</md-data-table-toolbar>
<md-data-table-container>
<table md-data-table md-row-select="selected" md-progress="deferred">
<thead md-order="query.order" md-trigger="onOrderChange">
<tr>
<th name="Dessert" unit="100g serving" order-by="name"></th>
<th numeric name="Calories" order-by="calories.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Fat" unit="g" order-by="fat.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Carbs" unit="g" order-by="carbs.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Protein" unit="g" order-by="protein.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Sodium" unit="mg" order-by="sodium.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Calcium" unit="%" order-by="calcium.value"></th>
<th numeric name="Iron" unit="%" order-by="iron.value"></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr md-auto-select ng-repeat="dessert in desserts.data">
<td>{{dessert.name}}</td>
<td>{{dessert.calories.value}}</td>
<td>{{dessert.fat.value | number: 1}}</td>
<td>{{dessert.carbs.value}}</td>
<td>{{dessert.protein.value | number: 1}}</td>
<td>{{dessert.sodium.value}}</td>
<td show-unit>{{dessert.calcium.value}}</td>
<td show-unit>{{dessert.iron.value}}</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</md-data-table-container>
<md-data-table-pagination md-limit="query.limit" md-page="query.page" md-total="{{desserts.total}}" md-trigger="onPaginationChange"></md-data-table-pagination>
- Support for various attribute syntaxes. For example,
data-ng-repeat
,x-ng-repeat
,x:ng:repeat
, etc.
- As @sbehun pointed out, the default type for
buttons
across browsers is unpredictable and it is safest to always define a type. This version will prevent tables that are wrapped in forms from submitting the form when the pagination buttons are clicked.
- Changing Angular Material dependency version to allow versions greater than 0.10.x
- Adding support for Browserify.
View the archives for a complete version history.
- Column Ordering
- Inline Menus
- Long Header Titles
- Numeric Columns
- Pagination
- Row Selection
- [Table Progress] (#table-progress)
- Table Toolbars
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
md-order |
<thead> |
String |
Two-way data binding order property. |
md-trigger |
<thead> |
function |
Will execute when the order is changed, passing the order as a parameter. |
order-by |
<th> |
String |
The value to sort on when the user clicks the column name. |
descend-first |
<th> |
NULL |
Tell the directive to first sort descending. |
The mdOrder
attribute will be update when the user clicks a <th>
cell to the value defined by the order-by
attribute. The mdOrder
attribute can be used in to do server-side sorting or client-side sorting.
If the function assigned to the md-trigger
attribute returns a promise, a loading indicator will be displayed.
This directive does not support sorting of in-place data, i.e. data included directly in the markup, nor do I plan on supporting this.
The provided usage example takes advantage of server-side sorting by submitting a query to the server.
Just add an orderBy:
property to the ng-repeat
attribute that matches the md-order
attribute.
<md-data-table-container>
<table md-data-table>
<thead md-order="order">
<!-- this cell will order by the name property -->
<th order-by="name" name="Dessert (100g serving)"></th>
<!-- this cell will not change the order when clicked -->
<th numeric name="Calories"></th>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr ng-repeat="dessert in desserts | orderBy: order"></tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</md-data-table-container>
Table cells support inline menus. To use an inline menu, place an md-select
element inside a table cell.
Example
<td>
<md-select ng-model="dessert.type" placeholder="Other">
<md-option ng-value="type" ng-repeat="type in getTypes()">{{type}}</md-option>
</md-select>
</td>
Clicking anywhere in the cell will activate the menu. In addition, the row will not be selected when the cell is clicked if you have automatic row selection enabled.
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
trim |
<th> |
NULL |
trim long column names. |
When trim
is place on a column header, the width of the column will be determined by the column body. If the width of the column header exceeds the width of the column body, it will be truncated with ellipsis.
I believe it is wise to restrict the minimum width of a column. By default column headers will enforce a minimum width of 60px
. This is a just a CSS property; however, you may overwrite it in your style sheet.
table[md-data-table] > thead > tr > th > div[trim] {
min-width: 100px;
}
Numeric columns align to the right of table cells. Column headers support the following attributes for numeric data.
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
sig-row |
<thead> |
Integer |
The index of the row to use to determine the column type. The default is the last row |
numeric |
<th> |
NULL |
Informs the directive the column is numeric in nature. |
unit |
<th> |
String |
Specifies the unit. Providing a unit will automatically add the unit, wrapped in parenthesis, to the header cell. |
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
show-unit |
<td> |
NULL |
Displays the unit in the body cell; unit must be specified on the header cell. |
You may use Angular's number filter on a body cell to set the decimal precision.
<!-- 2 decimal places -->
<td>{{dessert.protein.value | number: 2}}</td>
Attribute | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
md-label |
Object |
Change the pagination label. The default is 'Rows per page:'. |
md-limit |
Number |
A row limit. |
md-page |
Number |
Page number. |
md-total |
Number |
Total number of items. |
md-row-select |
Array |
Row limit options. The default is [5, 10, 15] |
md-trigger |
function |
Will execute when the page or limit is changed, passing the page and limit as parameters. |
The md-label
attribute has the following properties.
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
text | String |
The pagination label. |
of | String |
The 'of' in 'x - y of z'. |
If the function assigned to the md-trigger
attribute returns a promise, a loading indicator will be displayed.
Example: Client Side pagination using ngRepeat.
<tr ng-repeat="item in array | orderBy: myOrder | limitTo: myLimit: (myPage - 1) * myLimit">
<!-- and your pagination element will look something like... -->
<md-data-table-pagination md-limit="myLimit" md-page="myPage" md-total="{{array.length}}"></md-data-table-pagination>
Requires
ng-repeat
.
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
md-row-select |
<table> |
Array |
Two-way data binding of selected items |
sig-row |
<thead> |
Integer |
The index of the row to append the master toggle to in the column header. The default is the last row |
md-auto-select |
<tr> |
NULL |
allow row selection by clicking anywhere inside the row. |
md-disable-select |
<tr> |
`expression | function` |
Example: Disable all desserts with more than 400 calories.
<tr md-disable-select="dessert.calories.value > 4000"></tr>
<!-- or assuming isDisabled is defined in you controller -->
<tr md-disable-select="isDisabled(dessert)"></tr>
Attribute | Target | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
md-progress |
<table> |
promise |
The table will display a loading indicator until notified. |
A progress indicator can be displayed in a couple different ways. If the function you supply to the md-trigger
attributes returns a promise, then a loading indicator will be automatically displayed whenever any events within the scope of the table are dispatched (i.e. reordering, pagination).
It's not unlikely that some events outside the scope of the table will effect its contents. For example, a search field that filters the table by sending a query to the server. To provide flexibility for such events, the table directive has a md-progress
attribute that accepts a promise
and will display a progress indicator until notified.
Tables may be embedded within cards that offer navigation and data manipulation tools available at the top and bottom.
In general, use an md-data-table-toolbar
for table toolbars, however; if you need to display information relative to a particular column in the table you may use use a <tfoot>
element. For example, say you had a calories.total
property that summed the total number of calories and you wanted to display that information directly beneath the Calories column.
<tfoot>
<tr>
<td></td>
</td><strong>Total:</strong> {{calories.total}}</td>
</tr>
</tfoot>
Observe that Calories is the second column in the table. Therefore, we need to offset the first column with an empty cell. If you need to offset many columns you can use <td colspan="${n}"></td>
where n
is the number of columns to offset.
Note that the directive is smart enough to insert an empty cell for the row selection column and that empty cells are not required after the last cell.
Requires
- node
- grunt-cli
This repository contains a demo application for developing features. As you make changes the application will live reload itself.
update
I noticed the nutrition app was an inconvenience for people trying to run the app locally and contribute. I have updated the demo application to remove the dependency for the nutrition app. This is also a good example of how you can take advantage of ngRepeat
to easily achieve client side sorting and pagination.
Clone this repository to your local machine.
git clone https://github.com/daniel-nagy/md-data-table.git
cd md-data-table
Create a new branch for the issue you are working on.
git checkout -b my-issue
Install the package dependencies.
npm install
bower install
Run the application and visit 127.0.0.1:8000
in the browser.
grunt
Make your modifications and update the build.
grunt build
Create a pull request!