- The stateDuration option has been updated to provide the ability to
indicate if sessionStorage should be used rather than localStorage
(set value to -1).
- Settings stateDuration to 0 also indicates that the duration is
infinity.
- Parts of the state saving have been optimised for code size, so this
commit actually reduces the min size by 32 bytes despite the new
abilities.
- See thread 19572 for discussion on this
- When invalidating a DOM row, DataTables wasn't taking into account the
fact that the columns in the row might be hidden. This means that the
array of data read is shortened by the number of hidden columns, and
thus the data is corrupted.
- Fix is to read from the known cells if the row already exists
- Th old comma as a decimal place plug-in isn't needed anymore since
DataTables now has that ability built in using the `thousands` and
`decimal` options
- The piplining example didn't have any method to submit additional data
with the Ajax request, other than to modify the library function.
- This commit adds a `data` option which provides the same functionality
as the `ajax.data` option in DataTables - i.e. it can be an object or
function
and result set for the plural methods.
Fix: Row details events were itterating over non-DataTables rows
creating a Javascript error
Fix: Example - Server-side processing row details example updated to be
able to restore the details row on a redraw.
Update: Documentation - Most examples which used `flatten()` are more
correct to use the new `eq()` method, so they have been updated.
- This set of changes is based on the discussion in thread 19377. While
working on the fix, I realised that the use of flatten() is too broad,
so the new `eq()` function is introduced. It is similar to the jQuery
eq() method in that it reduces the instance to just the selected
index, although in DataTables this is both the context and the result
set. Its a small addition, but I think it will provide to be very
useful
DataTables which character is used as a decimal place in the table's
data, so that number which are formatted using characters other than a
dot as the decimal place can be correctly detected and sorted.
- A large part of the world uses the comma as a decimal place, so it
makes sense to have this option built-in directly to DataTables,
rather than needing to use plu-in sorting types as before:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_mark
- However, the decimal place character cannot be detected automatically
since there are far to many ambiguities. As such, a new
`language.decimal` option is defined which is passed through to the
type detection functions. The type detection functions can then use
that character to alter their detection functions to transform numbers
into the dot formatted equivilent for parsing in Javascript.
- The numeric sorting methods have been bundled together in the function
`_addNumericSort` which is called when a character is given for the
decimal mark, adding the sorting functions required specifically for
that mark. This means that any character at all can be added, while
keeping the table's sort performance as it was.
- Code size in increased a little for this new feature, but a lot of
work has been done to keep it to a minimum (while still optimising for
the most common use case of a dot decimal place), and this is a good
feature to have in DataTables' core code.
- All required documentation added and updated.
- Special thanks to Tobias Bäthge for suggesting and sponsoring this
feature.
- Added new orthogonal data example
- Updated columns.data and columns.render documentation
- Reordering the manual a little
- Add note to the old orthogonal data blog post to direct people to the
new manual page
- The jQueryUI option is depricated in 1.10 and will be removed in 1.11
to be replaced by style integration files int he same way that
Bootstrap and Foundation use. This helps to reduce the size of the
core for a feature that is no longer used that often, while also
ensureing that DataTables remains modular and supports many styling
libraries.
- As a result of this change, I want developers to be able to implement
1.10 without needing to use a depricated option, so this highlights
the newly added jQuery styling integration files from the plug-ins
repo.
simple() static method which makes it very easy to make a server-side
processing request.
- In the examples the SQL statements are all basically the same, so
having this method to wrap them into a single function cal absolutely
makes sense.
- Also added a `formatter` option to the columns array which will format
the data as needed using a closure function.
- Renaming in keeping with the new terminology
- Updating example which uses it (main documentation still to be
written)
- Backwards compatible with a bit of logic to check if the old version
is being passed in
- Updating the build process to introduce the example builder to convert
the XML example files into HTML files. This process is performed for a
number of reasons:
- Much more maintainable - links automatically updated
- Add / remove examples easier
- Modify page styling easier
- Examples can be directly integrated into web-site since they are
transformed by template
- Common data sharing
- Note that the work on the new example build process is not complete in
this commit, there are still a few things to do! css, media paths and
completing the templates.
- DataTables/DataTables is now going to be a build mirror of
DataTables/DataTableSrc which will host the source core. Scripts will
be used to build the generated files as there will be a number of
these now (examples, JS, CSS, web-site documentation etc).
source orthogonal data for filtering, sorting and type detection data.
- In HTML5 the data-* attributes can be used to add semantic data to an
HTML page, which a user will not see, but the scripts on the page can
interact with. DataTables now has the ability to use these attributes
(actually any attribute can be used) as a data source. Previously DOM
sourced tables always used just the content of the cells for all data
interaction, but this can provide advanced controls in just the same
way that Javascript / Ajax sourced data can do orthogonal data in
DataTables.
- A typical use case is to provide numeric sorting information for
complex formatted dates that the browser doesn't understand with
Date.prase().
- Showing and hiding details about a row in a child row is very useful
and proven to be a popular part of DataTables. This commit provides
that ability in the new API and extends it. It also fully modularises
the child rows aspects, so it could be removed from the core without
effecting any other aspects (it may be moved into a seperate file in
future).
- This will effectively replace fnOpen, fnClose and fnIsOpen
- Added methods:
- row( selector, opts ).child()
- row( selector, opts ).child( str, class )
- row( selector, opts ).child( str, class ).show()
- row( selector, opts ).child( str, class ).hide()
- row( selector, opts ).child.show()
- row( selector, opts ).child.hide()
- row( selector, opts ).child.isShown()
- Note that unlike the old API you need to specify the data first, and
then use the show() method to show the child row. This allows the
details rows to be configured before they are actually shown.
- Additionally multiple child rows can be attached to a parent (pass
`str` (from above) as an array to use this feature. API plug-ins could
use this ability to show fully nested tables.
- Not just a string can be passed in now, but also a TR node which will
actually be used (rather than put into a nested row), any other type
of node (which will be inserted into a wrapper row/cell) or a jQuery
object.
- Cope with the change in jQuery 1.9 for element ordering. From the
DataTables thread on this topic ( 14316 ):
So a bit of further investigation into this - I've used these two test
caseS:
No DataTables: http://live.datatables.net/uwidel/edit#source
DataTables: http://live.datatables.net/ivojev/4/edit
The new DataTables version shows that jQuery 1.9 is now always trying to
order the nodes by document order, not but the order that they are found
in the source array. Additionally removed nodes are appended to the
results, themselves in reserve order, but that's just the way the Sizzle
node ordering works when items are not in the document (try sorting
numbers and you get the same result).
Given the suggestion in the release notes that the move is to have nodes
always treated in document order, I don't think this is a bug, so not
filing one. It is a bit frustrating that the nodes are iterated in a
different order from the source array, but it is expected from their
documentation and comments. So this is simply something we'll need to
work around.
To that end, I've updated the examples and taken the unusual step of
updating the examples on this site outside the normal release cycle. The
examples in the 1.9.4 current release of DataTables can't change of
course, but the updated examples will be in 1.10 when it is released.
- Note that this update is not complete, just the initialisation is
done. The examples will shortly be rewritten to be more modular when
this will be completed (i.e. the code shown on the page will be
updated)
- Rather than using Javascript to show a placeholder, use the HTML5
`placeholder` attribute. That is what it is there for and is supported
by all current shipping browsers (IE9- do not support it, but will not
break)
minor improvement: calculate index based on the element's parent th.
this is better because it allows to have some columns that are not searchable (like when the first row is a checkbox row)
Backwards compatibility issues: The main goal here (other than to use camel-case notation!) is to preserve backwards compatibility. Unfortunately this isn't 100% possible:
- DataTable.defaults.columns has been renamed to be DataTable.defaults.column
- Otherwise it conflicts with aoColumns in the defaults.
Without doubt this is going to be a long process - for example the unit tests and examples need to be completely updated for this change. The JSDoc comments have been updated, so the site should take care of itself for the most part, when released.
In terms of implementation, it is important to note that I have not broken backwards compatibility here - the way it is does is that the current defaults are retained, and a camel-case to Hungarian mapping is automatically generated and then applied to the objects given by the end user. This adds around 0.5K to the size of DataTables, but writing the mapping manually would require at least 3K, and changing DataTables wholesale to camel-case would utterly break backwards compatibility. This is the least 'evil' way to accomplish this. It is important to note that this is a step along the roadmap for DataTables - come v2 Hungarian notation will likely be dropped completely.
One important note to make about this mapping is that if you use camel-case DataTables will copy the value from the camel-case properties to their Hungarian counterparts, so you will end up with additional properties on your source object. As I say, this appears to be to be the least 'evil' option, although still not perfect itself. The challenges of working with legacy software and installs...!
New: Static API method - fnIsDataTable - check if a TABLE node is a DataTable or not
New: Static API method - fnTables - get the DataTables that are initialised on the table (optionally limit to just the visible tables)
Examples update - Tabs and scrolling updated to use the new static fnTables method
Fix: Settings object model was missing the nScrollHead and nScrollFoot properties from the documentation
New: New init option fnCreatedRow - very similar to fnCreatedCell but in this case used for TR elements
Updated: fnCreatedCell now also gets the column index passed in
Update: fnRowCallback - no need to return the TR element - it was a fairly pointless thing to do - if you want to replace the element then you need to do it with fnDrawCallback
Changed: From the previous commit sNames sent from the client to server is now a comma seperated list of sNames and is always sent regardless of if names are given or not. This matches the sName formatting for the server-to-client return.