- Ruby 2.0.0 or higher
- Rails 4.0.0 or higher
- Bootstrap from Twitter
Require tabulatr2 in your Gemfile:
gem 'tabulatr2'
After that run bundle install
.
Also add //= require tabulatr
to your application js file and *= require tabulatr
to your CSS asset
pipeline. Make sure to add it after including the bootstrap
assets.
In order to get the provided i18n
language files run
rails g tabulatr:install
Tabulatr
provides an easy to use DSL to define the data to be used in your table. It is defined in TabulatrData
classes. If you have a User
model you would create a UserTabulatrData
class.
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
end
Instead of creating this class by hand you can also generate a TabulatrData
for a given class by running
rails g tabulatr:table User
Let's say you want to display each user's first_name
and last_name
attribute:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column :first_name
column :last_name
end
That's it. It'll work, but let's assume you would like to display the full name in one single column. No worries! Tabulatr
got you covered:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column :full_name, table_column_options: {header: 'The full name'} do |user|
link_to "#{user.first_name} #{user.last_name}", user
end
end
As you can see you just need to provide a block to the column
call and you can format the cell into whatever you want.
You can even use all those fancy Rails helpers!
Unfortunately, we can't sort and filter this column right now because Tabulatr
would look for a full_name
column in
your DB table but there is no such thing. Bummer! Enter sort_sql
and filter_sql
:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column :full_name, sort_sql: "users.first_name || '' || users.last_name",
filter_sql: "users.first_name || '' || users.last_name"
end
With these two options you can provide whatever SQL you would like to have executed when filtering or sorting this particular column. If instead you want to disable sorting and filtering at all, you can do that too:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column :full_name, table_column_options: {sortable: false, filter: false}
end
Also you are able to change generated filter form field for this column. Say for example you want to have an exact
filter instead of a LIKE
filter:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column :first_name, table_column_options: {filter: :exact}
end
Following is a table with all the standard mappings for filter fields, which means these filters get created if you don't overwrite it:
Data type | Generated form field / SQL |
---|---|
integer, float, decimal | String input field, exact match |
string, text | String input field, LIKE match |
date, time, datetime, timestamp | Select field, with options like 'last 30 days', 'today', ... |
boolean | Select field, options are 'Yes', 'No' and 'Both' |
To display associations you would use the association
method with the association name and the attribute on the
association as it's first two arguments:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
association :citizenship, :name
end
Associations take the same arguments as the column
method:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
association :citizenship, :name do
record.citizenship.name.upcase
end
association :posts, :text, table_column_options: {filter: false, sortable: false} do |user|
user.posts.count
end
end
To provide a checkbox for each row which is needed by batch actions just call checkbox
:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
checkbox
end
To provide a column that's not sortable and filterable but renders something nice:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
action do |r|
link_to "edit", edit_product_path(r)
end
end
To render a fancy button group:
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
buttons do |b,r|
b.button :eye, product_path(r), class: 'btn-success'
b.button :pencil, edit_product_path(r), class: 'btn-warning'
b.submenu do |s|
s.button :star, star_product_path(r), label: 'Dolle Sache'
s.divider
s.button :'trash-o', product_path(r), label: 'Löschen', confirmation: 'echt?', class: 'btn-danger', method: :delete
end
end
end
You may want to show actions and/or buttons depending on a condition,
e.g., user's role. You can access controller helpers with
@controller
. Here is how to check, if you are
using Pundit (or any other
authorization gem):
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
buttons do |b,r|
if @controller.policy(r).show?
b.button :eye, product_path(r), class: 'btn-success'
end
end
end
The DSL provides you with a search
method to define a custom fuzzy search method which is not bound
to a specific column.
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
search do |query|
"users.first_name LIKE '#{query}' OR users.last_name LIKE '#{query}' OR users.address LIKE '#{query}'"
end
# This call could also be written as:
# search :first_name, :last_name, :address
end
You're also able to create custom filters with the filter
method to create more advanced
filters which are independent of the displayed columns.
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
filter :age_range do |relation, value|
if value == 'upto_18'
relation.where("birthday > ?", Date.today-18.years)
elsif value == 'over_18'
relation.where("birthday <= ?", Date.today-18.years)
end
end
end
This code will look for a partial to render in tabulatr/filter/_age_range.*
.
You can override this path by specifying the partial
argument of the filter
method.
It will call it's block with the ActiveRecord::Relation and the submitted value after
the user submits the filter form.
# tabulatr/filter/_age_range.html.erb
<div class='form-group'>
<label class='control-label' for="<%= input_id %>">Age range</label>
<select id="<%= input_id %>" name="<%= input_name %>">
<option value=''>None</option>
<option value='upto_18'>0 - 17</option>
<option value='over_18'>18+</option>
</select>
</div>
As you can see there are two locales defined which should be used for your custom form
field: input_name
and input_id
To provide row specific HTML-Attributes call row
:
row do |record, row_config|
if record.super_important?
row_config[:class] = 'important';
end
row_config[:data] = {
href: edit_user_path(record.id),
vip: record.super_important?
}
end
Great, we have defined all the required columns
in the TabulatrData DSL, but how do we display the table now?
In UsersController#index
we write:
def index
tabulatr_for User
end
This call responds to an HTML-Request by rendering the associated view
and for a JSON-Request by
fetching the requested records.
Hint: If you want to prefilter your table, you can do that too! Just pass an ActiveRecord::Relation
to tabulatr_for
:
def index
tabulatr_for User.where(active: true)
end
In the view we can use all the attributes which are defined in our UserTabulatrData
class.
To display all the columns defined in the UserTabulatrData
class we
just need to put the following statement in our view:
<%= table_for User %>
If you just want do display a subset of the defined columns or show them in a
different order you can provide them as arguments to the columns
key:
<%= table_for User, columns: [:full_name, 'citizenship:name', {posts: :text}]%>
Note that you can write associations as a string with colon between association name and method or as a hash as you can see above.
An other option is to provide the columns in a block:
<%= table_for User do |t|
t.column :full_name
t.column :active
t.association :citizenship, :name
t.association :posts, :text
t.column :edit_link
end %>
To add a checkbox column just add
t.checkbox
To add a select box with batch-actions (actions that should be performed on all selected rows), we add an option to the table_for:
<%= table_for User, batch_actions: {'foo' => 'Foo', 'delete' => "Delete"} do |t|
...
end %>
To handle the actual batch action, we have to add a block to the tabulatr_for
call in the controller:
tabulatr_for User do |batch_actions|
batch_actions.delete do |ids|
ids.each do |id|
User.find(id).destroy
end
redirect_to root_path()
return
end
batch_actions.foo do |ids|
... do whatever is foo-ish to the records
end
end
where the ids
parameter to the block is actually an Array containing the numeric ids of the currently selected rows.
Tabulatr aims at making the ever-recurring task of creating listings of ActiveRecord models simple and uniform.
We found ourselves reinventing the wheel in every project we made, by using
- different paging mechanisms,
- different ways of implementing filtering/searching,
- different ways of implementing selecting and batch actions,
- different layouts.
We finally thought that whilst gems like Formtastic or SimpleForm provide a really cool, uniform and concise way to implement forms, it's time for a table builder. During a project with Magento, we decided that their general tables are quite reasonable, and enterprise-proven -- so that's our starting point.
Tabulatr tries to make these common tasks as simple/transparent as possible:
- paging
- selecting/checking/marking
- filtering
- batch actions
These options should be specified at the view level as parameters to the table_for
call.
They change the appearance and behaviour of the table.
filter: true, # false for no filter row at all
search: true, # show fuzzy search field
paginate: false, # true to show paginator
pagesize: 20, # default pagesize
sortable: true, # true to allow sorting (can be specified for every sortable column)
batch_actions: false, # :name => value hash of batch action stuff
footer_content: false, # if given, add a <%= content_for <footer_content> %> before the </table>
path: '#', # where to send the AJAX-requests to
order_by: nil # default order,
html_class: '' # html classes for the table element
counter_position: :top # position of the counter row, can by :top, :bottom or :both
<%= table_for User, {order_by: 'last_name desc', pagesize: 50} %>
You can specify these options either in your TabulatrData
class or to
the columns in the block of table_for
.
header: nil, # override content of header cell
classes: nil, # CSS classes for this column
width: false,
align: false,
valign: false,
wrap: nil,
th_html: false,
filter_html: false,
filter_label: nil,
filter: true, # whether this column should be filterable
sortable: true, # whethter this column should be sortable
format: nil,
map: true,
cell_style: {}, # CSS style for all body cells of this column
header_style: {} # CSS style for all header cells of this column
# in the view
<%= table_for User do |t|
t.column(:first_name, header_style: {color: 'red'})
# ...
%>
# or in TabulatrData
class UserTabulatrData < Tabulatr::Data
column(:first_name, table_column_options: {header_style: {color: 'red'}})
end
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
- Check out the Issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
- Fork the project
- Start a feature/bugfix branch
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
- Make sure to add tests for it, run them via
rspec spec
and check that they all pass. - Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
- Feel free to send a pull request if you think others (me, for example) would like to have your change incorporated into future versions of tabulatr.