- When using _pluck with deferred rendering, there were a number of
errors due to the nTr element being undefined (that's what deferred
rendering is all about of course). So the logic to check that pluck
can pluck from a source object needs ot be added.
object
- Previously to modify the class names that DataTables uses for its
components you has to use $.fn.dataTable.ext.oStdClasses. Now you can
use the `classes` initialisation option which will extend the classes
object of the DataTable.
- This fixes issue #180.
- Building on the new ability of DataTables to work with element
attributes as data sources for sorting and filtering, this commit adds
auto-detection of the attributes 'data-sort' and 'data-filter' in DOM
sourced tables.
- The first row in the table is used for this auto-detection and the
built mData object assigned only when it is found to be the default
for the column (i.e. the column index). So any custom value is
retained and thus if you want to use a custom value you need to build
the attribute querying object manually (I think the majority of uses
will not need this!).
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().
- The SCSS stylesheet is now feature complete, and the
jquery.dataTables.css file found in the repo is now directly generated
from that SCSS file. The SCSS online compiler will run the stylesheet:
http://sass-lang.com/try.html .
New: SCSS base stylesheet with variables for colours
New: Pagination styling
- DataTables now has the ability to selectively enable different style
types by applying different class names to the host table. The options
supported are:
- hover - show a hover effect over rows
- stripe - show odd/even row stripes
- row-border - show a vertical border between rows
- cell-border - show a border around all four sides of a row (only
one of row-border or cell-border should be used)
- sort-column - highlighting of the sorting column.
I will be adding another class along the lines of `display` which will
enable 'hover, stripe, row-border and sort-column' (although this is
not yet implemented).
The reason for doing this is to encorage developers to style their
DataTables more their own way, but making it easier to enable the
features they want.
- To that end, the DataTables stylesheet will be generated from a SCSS
template in future. The SCSS template is included in this comment
(although the generated stylesheet is not yet committed). This allows
colours to be changed which a trivial amount of effort, while still
being able to get row highlighting etc, thanks to SCSS's colour
functions.
- Pagination styles have been updated to fit in with the new styling of
the DataTable.
flexible and simple to actually use.
New: Two additional built-in pagination types: 'simple_numbers' and
'full'.
Update: 'two_buttons' type pagination (previous default) renamed to
'simple'.
New: Default pagination type is now 'simple_numbers'.
New: Introducing renderers to DataTables (something that will play an
important part moving forward).
New: Simplified pagination button classes to simply:
* "sPageButton": "paginate_button"
* "sPageButtonActive": "current"
* "sPageButtonDisabled": "disabled"
- The basis for this commit is a restructuring of how pagination
plug-ins work in DataTables, whereby the pagination plug-in simply
returns an array of button types which should be shown. These are then
actually displayed by the renderer. This seperates the logic for which
buttons to show from the display logic, making it much easier, both to
customise which buttons will be shown, and for integration plug-ins to
customise the display of the buttons (since they don't need to
replicate the button calculation logic). This change allows us to
introduce two new built-in pagination types to DataTables with minimal
size cost. Indeed, this change as a whole reduces the compressed
DataTables size by 2.5K (additional functionality, simpler and smaller
- what's not to like!?).
- Pagination button classes in DataTables were a mess before, with
different classes used for the two built in types, with the additional
complexity of only one of the defined class options being used, rather
than concatinating the classes based on the type. This was bonkers and
a barrier to new users styling the form as they wanted. Reducing to
just three class options, and having the active and disabled options
added to the base class makes it MUCH simpiler. This could hit
backwards compatiblity for those who had styled the mad old style, but
it would have been crazy to keep it while writing the rest.
- If a row has been invalidated, then we need to perform a full
re-filter, so we need to pass this invalidation information back up
from the invalidation checker to the filtering functions.
- If the number of columns in the table were reduced, then the column
filter state that was saved would be incorrect since it would define
more columns that there were. Equally sorting could potentially be
done on a column that no longer exists.
- There were a few work around in the code already to try and address
this a bit, bit not satisfactorily as seen by thread 14114. The real
issue was that the columns were being detected after the state was
being loaded - ideally we want to load state after the columns had
been detected and throw away the state saved if the columns did not
match since the table might be entirly different.
- This is done by a little bit of reordering in the constructor, and
actually simplifies the code a bit.
- I had inadvertantly broken the ability to set an initial draw position
using `displayStart` or state saving with the small refactoring of
_fnDraw and fnDisplayEnd. fnDisplayEnd must be called with
settings._iDisplayStart set, which is now done simply by changing the
order of calling a little.
property
- Extending the funtionality of DT_RowId and DT_RowClass, this commit
adds DT_RowData which utalises jQuery's `$().data()` method to set
HTML5 data-* attributes, which can be useful for additional meta data.
- This is some what complimentary to using objects as the data source
where you could just use row().data() to get the data, but this is
effectively an orthogonal way of getting the data and might be useful
for existing Javascript libraries.
- It should be noted that the data-sort and data-filter work I'll be
doing for v1.10 shortly will not interact with this method, that will
be DOM sourced data only, while this is Ajax / Javascript based only.
However, if you do want to use data from this source for filtering /
sorting, its easy to do with `data` - `data: 'DT_RowData.sort'` for
example.
- This fixes issue #45.
- Had split the row details out into its own file a little while back,
since it is 100% self contained now, but hadn't committed the file!
Here is it now.
errors
- A lot of posts in the forum are questions such as "what does the
invalid JSON response" error mean, or "how to fix the unknown
requested parameter error". To address these, rather than having them
answered individually in the forum, I'm going to write a series of
technical notes for DataTables (getting started, how to use columns
etc) and as part of those, each error that DataTables can fire off
will have a technical note explaining in deatil what the error means.
- Example:
DataTables warning: table id=example - Invalid JSON response. For
more information about this error, please see
http://datatables.net/tn/1
- This commit puts the required logic in place. The technical notes
don't exist yet, but they will soon. They will be:
1 - Invalid JSON response
2 - Non-table node initialisation ({this.nodeName})
3 - Cannot reinitialise DataTable
4 - Requested unknown parameter {param} for row {idx}
5 - Unknown paging action: {action}
6 - Possible column misalignment
- The table cannot fit into the current element which
will cause column
- This also has the advantage that the errors in the DataTables code can
be a little smaller. Around 500 bytes saved.
- This fixes issue #173
non-array element
- If found to be something other than an array, it will treat it as if
it were an array with a single element in it, of the value given.
- With the new API that is being introduced in v1.10, the old API
(fnUpdate, fnAddData etc) is being deprecated and retired. It is now a
shim layer calling through the new API, rather than duplicating the
logic of the calls, but is still provided for backwards compatiblity.
- It is _strongly_ recommended that you start to use the new API from
this point in - very certainly for new projects.
- The api() method, is not deprecated, it is new in 1.10 and provides a
way to get access to a DataTables API instance from the jQuery host
object, if the table is initlaised with `dataTable()` (rather than
`DataTable()` which does give you the API instance. It has a single
option which is used by the old API's shim layer to allow it to use
the iApiIndex option to get the context to be used.
- There were two functions called _fnGetRowData, which were conflicting
- The $().map doesn't execute with the scope of the element, need to
pass the element through to the get data function correctly.
- The row()/rows() methods have index methods, so it makes sense that
the column(s) and cell(s) methods also have index methods to get the
raw information out of the table. Rather than shying away from the
indexes in 1.10, as has been done with the pervious versions of
DataTables, 1.10 will embrase them as first class citizens.
- New methods:
- columns().index()
- column().index()
- cells().index()
- cell().index()
- It is possible at the moment to use rows().data() to get the data for
the table, you can use rows().data( { order: 'index' } ); to get the
data in index order - I suspect a reasonably common use when working
with the data set (at least, I use it that way!) and its a but clumsy
to write that way, particularly compared to the old fnGetData method.
So the new data() method is a short cut for `rows().data( { order:
'index' } ).flatten()` to get the data set for the host table(s).
- For consistency and completeness, the cell() and cells() methods now
accept their own cell selector option (rather than just rows and
columns) which is a jQuery selector, or no selector at all for all
cells. Additionally it allows an options object to be passed in, to
allow configuraiton of the order of data etc.
- The cells() method now has these calling options:
- cells() - all cells
- cells( opts ) - option configuration
- cells( selector ) - cell selector
- cells( selector, opts ) - cell selector + options
- cells( rowSelector, columnSelector ) - row + column selector
- cells( rowSelector, columnSelector, opts ) - row + column selector +
opttions
- The cell() method as the same signature.
with newly added rows
- Looking at fnAddData, and about to replace it, I realised that
fnAddData returned the indexes of the newly added row while the new
methods didn't. It makes sense for row.add() to return a row()
extended object with the newly added rows so row().node() etc can be
used. Also the indexes are in the inst, so that information is also
available. Likewise is done for its plural counterpart.
- Did consider creating an `augment` static method for the API, and
might yet do this, but this is the only place to use it at the moment.
Possibly it might be useful for plug-ins, but before adding, lets see
how the new API is used.
with plurality
- There are four groupings of plural / singular methods in the new API:
table(s), row(s), column(s) and cell(s). We need to provide similar
methods for each, often leading to code duplication. To help reduce
this code duplication I've created a new `registerPlural` method which
allows both the singular and plural to be derived from a single
function automatically. The plural form is given and wrapped up by a
container function which extracts a singular return.
- Note that not all singular methods can use this approach, for example
row().data() provides extra functionality over rows().data() in that
it can be used as a setter as well as getter.
- To round off the API, this commit adds a column() method, for working
with a single column, as with row/rows, cell/cells and table/tables.
- New methods:
- column() - Column selector
- column().data() - Get column data
- column().header() - Get the column header cell
- column().visible( set ) - Get / set the column visiblity
- column().order( dir ) - Order the table by this column
- Note that I haven't implemented column().search() yet as I'm sure
there must be a better way of dealing with the singular functions...
Need to look at the four groups a bit more before this (and then the
API :-) ) is finalised
- The columns().data() method was flattening the returned array. While
possibly okay on its own, that doesn't match the behaviour of how
rows().data() works, where each row is an entry in the array, rather
than the array being flattened. As such I've changed columns().data()
to work work in the say way, for each column you select, you get an
entry in the api instance - an array with the data for the that
column.
- To allow for hte fact that some may want to work with the flattened
data, I've added a `flatten()` method to the instance base, which is
basically a shortcut call to `reduce`.
- Now that we have the cells() / cell() methods, with the ability to
select based on column and row, and the ability to get the whole row
or column cells, the TD get methods on row / rows / columns were
redundant and I think should be removed for berevity. It could also
get confusing with the chaining since there are nested and top level
methods with the same name.
- Removed:
- rows().cells()
- row().cells()
- columns().cells()
- New API methods:
- cell().invalidate() - Invalidate a single cell
- cells().invalidate() - Invalidate multiple cells
- Note that the invalidation is actually row based, rather than cell
based - i.e. the whole row is invalidated. This may change in future
versions of DataTables, but I'm concerned that it would add a lot of
code for little enhancement.
- New API methods:
- cells( rowSelector, columnSelector, opts ) - Cell selector
- cells( ... ).nodes() - Get the nodes for the selected cells
- cells( ... ).data() - Get the data for the selected cells
- cell( rowSelector, columnSelector, opts ) - Single cell selector
- cell( ... ).node() - Get the cell node
- cell( ... ).data() - Get the cell data
- There was a bug in `_selector_first` whereby it wasn't correctly
reducing the set - was gatting away with it before, because it was
reducing to a single element array, which has a toString() method
which allowed it to appear to work for integers.
- New API methods:
- table() - select a single table
- table().node() - get the table node for the table
- To be honest, these methods are not likely to be used particuarly
often, so I think they are fairly low priority, but they could provide
useful, and it is a public way to get the table node.
- New API methods:
- rows().invalidate() - Invalidate the matched rows
- row().invalidate() - Invalidate the matched row
- row().data( set ) - Set the data to use for the matched row
- This involves building upon the invalidation work done in the last few
commits and creating an invalidation function. This new function will
mark the cached data as invalid for re-reading by the sort and
filtering methods (this will need to be abstracted into modules in
1.11, but there is no infrastructure for that yet - that's what 1.11
is all about). Additionally the invalidation method will update either
the data held by DataTables (read from the DOM), or update the DOM if
the data source was not the DOM. A flag allows an override to state
the direction, although I think that generally speaking you might not
want to use the override (you might nuke parts of your data source
object if you read from the dom for example).