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React Data Table Component

Creating yet another React table library came out of necessity while developing a web application for a growing startup. I discovered that while there are some great table libraries out there, some required heavy customization, were missing out of the box features such as built in sorting and pagination, or required understanding the atmoic structure of html tables.

The goal of this project may change or grow, but it's simply to provide an easy to use interface for creating tables when you don't need complex enterprise capabilities, but still allowing some "leeway" for customization.

If you want to achieve balance with the force and want a simple but flexible table library give React Data Table Component a chance. If you require an Excel clone or heavy "enterprise" capabilities, then this is not the React table library you are looking for ๐Ÿ‘‹

Table of Contents

Demo and Examples

React Data Table Component Demo

Key Features

  • Declarative Configuration
  • Sortable (client)
  • Selectable Rows
  • Expandable Rows
  • Themeable via js config
  • Data Aware (i.e. easily callback to a parent component get the DataTable state, e.g. selectedRows
  • Responsive (via x-scroll/flex)
  • Pagination

Requirements

React Data Table Component requires the following be installed in your project:

  • React 16.8.0+
  • styled-components 3.2.3+ || 4.0.0+ || 5.0.0+

Installation

React Data Table requires the wonderful styled-components library. If you've already installed styled-components there is no need to install it again.

npm install react-data-table-component styled-components

or

yarn add react-data-table-component styled-components

Logging Issues and Contributions

Please use the github issue templates feature for logging issues or feature proposals. Including a codesanbox and providing clear details on the feature/issue will elicit a much quicker response ๐Ÿ˜‰

API and Usage

Columns

Nothing new here - we are using an array of object literals and properties to describle the columns:

Property Type Required Example
name string no the display name of our Column e.g. 'Name'
selector string yes a data set property in dot notation. e.g.
property1.nested1.nested2
property1.items[0].nested2
sortable bool no if the column is sortable
format func no format the selector e.g. row => moment(row.timestamp).format('lll')
cell func no for ultimate control use cell to render your own custom component! e.g row => <h2>{row.title}</h2>
negates format
grow number no flex-grow of the column. the is useful if you want a column to take up more width than its relatives (without having to set widths explicitly). this will be affected by other columns where you have explicitly set widths
width string no give the column a fixed width
minWidth string no give the column a minWidth
maxWidth string no give the column a maxWidth
right bool no right aligns the content in the cell. useful for numbers
center bool no center aligns the content in the cell
compact bool no reduces the padding in the cell by 50%
ignoreRowClick bool no prevents the onRowClicked event from being passed on the specific TableCell column. This is really useful for a menu or button where you do not want the onRowClicked triggered, such as when using onRowClicked for navigation or routing
button bool no this is like ignoreRowClick except it will apply aditional styling for button placement. you do not need to set ignoreRowClick when using button
wrap bool no whether the cell content should be allowed to wrap.
allowOverflow bool no allows content in the cell to overflow. useful for menus/layovers that do not rely on "smart" positioning
hide integer or string preset (sm, md, lg) no specify a screen size (breakpoint) as an integer (in pixels) that hides the column when resizing the browser window. You can also use the preset values of: sm (small), md(medium), and lg(large)

column.hide media presets

When the breakpoint is reached the column will be hidden. These are the built-in media breakpoint presets when hiding columns

Value Breakpoint Description
sm 599px small (phones)
md 959px medium(landscape tablets)
lg 1280px large(laptops/desktops)

DataTable Properties

Basic

Property Type Required Default Description
title string or component no The Title displayed in the Table Header
columns array yes [] The column configuration
data array no [] it is highly recommended that your data has a unique identifier (keyField). The default keyField is id. If you need to override this value then see keyField DataTable Properties.
keyField string no 'id' your data should have a unique identifier. By default, React Data Table looks for an id property for each item in your data. You must match keyField to your identifier key, especially if you want to manage row state at a later time or use the expander feature. If a unique id is not present, React Data Table will use the row index (not recommended) as the key value
striped bool no false stripe color the odd rows
highlightOnHover bool no false if rows are to be highlighted on hover
pointerOnHover bool no false if rows show a point icon on hover
noDataComponent string or component no A custom component to display when there are no records to display
className string no override the className on the Table wrapper
style object no override the style on the Table wrapper
responsive bool no true makes the table horizontally scrollable on smaller screen widths
customTheme object no Override the default theme, by overriding specific props. Your changes will be merged. See Theming for more information
disabled bool no false disables the Table section
onRowClicked func no callback to access the row data,index on row click
overflowY bool no false if a table is responsive, items such as layovers/menus/dropdowns will be clipped on the last row(s) due to to overflow-x-y behavior - setting this value ensures there is invisible space below the table to prevent "clipping". However, if possible, the correct approach is to use menus/layovers/dropdowns that support smart positioning. If used, the table parent element must have a fixed height or height: 100%.
overflowYOffset string no 250px used with overflowY to "fine tune" the offset
dense bool no false compacts the row height. can be overridden via theming rows.denseHeight. note that if any custom elements exceed the dense height then the row will only compact to the tallest element any of your cells
noTableHead bool no false hides the the sort columns and titles (TableHead) - this will obviously negate sorting

Progress Indicator

Property Type Required Default Description
progressPending bool no disables the table and displays a plain text Loading Indicator
progressComponent component no allows you to use your own custom progress component
progressCentered bool no absolutely position and center the progress over the table

Row Selection

Property Type Required Default Description
selectableRows bool no false Whether to show selectable checkboxes
selectableRowsNoSelectAll bool no false Whether to show the select all rows checkbox
clearSelectedRows bool no false toggling this property clears the selectedRows. If you use redux or react state you need to make sure that you pass a toggled value or the component will not update. See Clearing Selected Rows
onRowSelected func no callback to access the row selected state ({ allSelected, selectedCount, selectedRows }).
note It's highly recommended that you memoize the callback that you pass to onRowSelected if it updates the state of your parent component. This prevents DataTable from unnecessary re-renders every time your parent component is re-rendered
selectableRowsComponent func no Override the default checkbox component - must be passed as a function (e.g. Checkbox not <Checkbox />)
selectableRowsComponentProps object no Additional props you want to pass to selectableRowsComponent. See Advanced Selectable Component Options to learn how you can override indeterminate state
selectableRowsPreSelectedField string no a bool field on your dataset that controls whether a row is pre-selected. note this field can only be one level deep
selectableRowsDisabledField string no a bool field on your dataset that controls whether a row can be selected. note this field can only be one level deep

Row Expander

Property Type Required Default Description
expandableRows bool no false Whether to make a row expandable, if true it requires an expandableRowsComponent. It is highly recommended your data set have a unique identifier defined as the keyField for row expansion to work properly.
expandableIcon object no default expander icons you may pass in your own custom icons using the expandableIcon: { collapsed: <svg>...</svg>, expanded: <svg>...</svg>
expandableDisabledField string no React Data Table looks for this property in each item from your data and checks if that item can be expanded or not. You must set a bool value in the expandableDisabledField of your data if you want to use this feature. note this field can only be one level deep
defaultExpandedField string no React Data Table looks for this property in each item from your data and checks if that item should be expanded on initial render. You must set a bool value in the defaultExpandedField field of your data if you want to use this feature. note this field can only be one level deep
expandableRowsComponent string or component no A custom component to display in the expanded row. It will have the data prop composed so that you may access the row data

Sorting

Property Type Required Default Description
defaultSortField string no setting this ensures the table data is presorted before it renders and the field(selector) is focused
defaultSortAsc bool no true set this to false if you want the table data to be sorted in DESC order
sortIcon component no override the default sort icon - the icon must be a font or svg icon and it should be a "downward" icon since animation will be handled by React Data Table
onSort func no callback to access the sort state when a column is clicked. returns (column, sortDirection, event)
sortFunction func no pass in your own custom sort function e.g. `(rows, field, direction) => {...yourSortLogicHere}. you must return an array
sortServer bool no false disables internal sorting for use with server-side sorting or when you want to manually control the sort behavior. place your sorting logic and/or api calls in an onSort handler. note that sortFunction is a better choice if you simply want to override the internal sorting behavior

Pagination

Property Type Required Default Description
pagination bool no false enable pagination with defaults. by default the total record set will be sliced depending on the page, rows per page. if you wish to use server side pagination then use the paginationServer property
paginationServer bool no false changes the default pagination to work with server side pagination
paginationDefaultPage number no 1 the default page to use when the table initially loads
paginationTotalRows number no 0 allows you to provide the total row count for your table as represented by your API when performing server side pagination. if this property is not provided then react-data-table will use data.length
paginationPerPage number no 10 the default rows per page to use when the table initially loads
paginationRowsPerPageOptions number no [10, 15, 20, 25, 30] row page dropdown selection options
onChangePage func no null callback when paged that returns onChangePage(page, totalRows)
onChangeRowsPerPage func no null callback when rows per page is changed returns onChangeRowsPerPage(currentRowsPerPage, currentPage)
paginationComponent func no Pagination a component that overrides the default paginator component
paginationComponentOptions object no See Description overridable options for the built in pagination component. If you are developing a custom pagination component you can use paginationComponentOptions to pass in your own custom props. Defaults to: { rowsPerPageText: 'Rows per page:', rangeSeparatorText: 'of' }
paginationIconFirstPage no JSX a component that overrides the first page icon for the pagination
paginationIconLastPage no JSX a component that overrides the last page icon for the pagination
paginationIconNext no JSX a component that overrides the next page icon for the pagination
paginationIconPrevious no JSX a component that overrides the previous page icon for the pagination

Header

Property Type Required Default Description
actions component or array of components no add actions to the TableHeader
contextTitle string no override the context menu title
contextActions component or array of components no add context actions to the TableHeader context
noHeader bool no false removes the table header. title, contextTitle and contextActions will be ignored
fixedHeader bool no false makes the table header fixed allowing you to scroll the table body
fixedHeaderScrollHeight string no 100vh in order for fixedHeader to work this property allows you to set a static height to the TabelBody. height must be a fixed value
subHeader component or array of components no false show a subheader between the table and table header
subHeaderAlign string no right align the subheader content (left, right, center)
subHeaderWrap bool no true whether the subheader content should wrap
subHeaderComponent component or array of components no [] a component you want to render

Advanced Selectable Component Options

Sometimes 3rd party checkbox components have their own way of handling indeterminate state. We don't want React Data Table hardcoded to a specific ui lib or custom component, so instead a "hook" is provided to allow you to pass a function that will be resolved by React Data Table's internal Checkbox for use with indeterminate functionality.

Example Usage:

const { Checkbox } from 'react-md';

...

/*
  In this example, the react-md ui lib determines its own indeterminate state via the `uncheckedIcon` property.
  Let's override it. React Data Table is made aware if a checkbox is indetermite or not becuase internally we can resolve this   as `yourfunction(checkboxawareindeterminatestate)`
*/

const handleIndeterminate = isIndeterminate => (isIndeterminate ? <FontIcon>indeterminate_check_box</FontIcon> : <FontIcon>check_box_outline_blank</FontIcon>);

const MyComponent = () => (
  <DataTable
    title="Arnold Movies"
    columns={columns}
    data={data}
    selectableRows
    selectableRowsComponent={Checkbox} // Pass the function only
    selectableRowsComponentProps={{ uncheckedIcon: handleIndeterminate  }}
  />
);

Note This is currently only supported for indeterminate state, but may be expanded in the future if there is a demand

Basic Table

The following declarative structure creates a sortable table of Arnold movie titles:

import DataTable from 'react-data-table-component';

const data = [{ id: 1, title: 'Conan the Barbarian', year: '1982' } ...];
const columns = [
  {
    name: 'Title',
    selector: 'title',
    sortable: true,
  },
  {
    name: 'Year',
    selector: 'year',
    sortable: true,
    right: true,
  },
];

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        data={data}
      />
    )
  }
);

Selectable Rows

Let's make our rows selectable so we can access the selected results

...

const handleChange = (state) => {
  // You can use setState or dispatch with something like Redux so we can use the retrieved data
  console.log('Selected Rows: ', state.selectedRows);
};

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
      return (
        <DataTable
          title="Arnold Movies"
          columns={columns}
          data={data}
          selectableRows // add for checkbox selection
          onRowSelected={handleChange}
        />
    )
  }
);

Clearing Selected Rows

We need some hook to trigger all the selectedRows to clear. If you were building your own table component, you would manage the selected rows state in some parent component, however, in our case, since we to keep row management within React Data Table, a clearSelectedRows prop is provided so you can pass a toggled state.

It will be up to you to make sure you do not pass the same state twice. For example, if you set clearSelectedRows={true} twice, on the second update/trigger, none the rows will not be cleared.

...
// set the initial state
state = { toggledClearRows: false }
...

const handleChange = (state) => {
  // You can use setState or dispatch with something like Redux so we can use the retrieved data
  console.log('Selected Rows: ', state.selectedRows);
};

// Toggle the state so React Table Table changes to `clearSelectedRows` are triggered
const handleClearRows = () => {
  this.setState({ toggledClearRows: !this.state.toggledClearRows})
}

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        data={data}
        selectableRows // add for checkbox selection
        onRowSelected={handleChange}
        clearSelectedRows={this.state.toggledClearRows}
      />
    )
  }
);

Overriding with a 3rd Party Ui Component Library

Don't like those ugly html checkboxes? Let's override them with some react-md sexyiness. While we are at it we will also override the sortIcon:

...
import { Checkbox, FontIcon } from 'react-md';
...

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      title="Arnold Movies"
      columns={columns}
      data={data}
      selectableRows
      selectableRowsComponent={Checkbox} // Pass the function only
      selectableRowsComponentProps={{ inkDisabled: true }} // optionally, pass react-md supported props down to our custom checkbox
      sortIcon={<FontIcon>arrow_downward</FontIcon>} // use a material icon for our sort icon. rdt will rotate the icon 180 degrees
      onRowSelected={handleChange}
    />
    )
  }
);

Custom Cells

Let's give our Movie list a summary, but in the same cell as Name:

....

const data = [{ id: 1, title: 'Conan the Barbarian', summary: 'Orphaned boy Conan is enslaved after his village is destroyed...',  year: '1982' } ...];
const columns = [
  {
    name: 'Title',
    sortable: true,
    cell: row => <div><div style={{ fontWeight: bold }}>{row.title}</div>{row.summary}</div>,
  },
  {
    name: 'Year',
    selector: 'year',
    sortable: true,
    right: true,
  },
];

...

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        data={data}
        selectableRows
        selectableRowsComponent={Checkbox}
        selectableRowsComponentProps={{ inkDisabled: true }}
        sortIcon={<FontIcon>arrow_downward</FontIcon>}
        onRowSelected={handleChange}
      />
    )
  }
);

Expandable Rows

Let's make our rows expandable so we can view more details:

...

const data = [{ id: 1, title: 'Conan the Barbarian', summary: 'Orphaned boy Conan is enslaved after his village is destroyed...',  year: '1982', image: 'http://conan.image.png' } ...];
const columns = [
  {
    name: 'Title',
    sortable: true,
    cell: row => <div><div style={{ fontWeight: 700 }}>{row.title}</div>{row.summary}</div>,
  },
  {
    name: 'Year',
    selector: 'year',
    sortable: true,
    right: true,
  },
];

...

// The row data is composed into your custom expandable component via the data prop
const ExpanableComponent = ({ data }) => <img src={data.image} />;

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        data={data}
        selectableRows
        selectableRowsComponent={Checkbox}
        selectableRowsComponentProps={{ inkDisabled: true }}
        sortIcon={<FontIcon>arrow_downward</FontIcon>}
        onRowSelected={handleChange}
        expandableRows
        expandableRowsComponent={<ExpanableComponent />}
      />
    )
  }
);

But in some cases we don't have more details to show:

...

const data = [{ id: 1, title: 'Conan the Barbarian', summary: 'Orphaned boy Conan is enslaved after his village is destroyed...',  year: '1982', expanderDisabled: true, image: 'http://conan.image.png' } ...];
const columns = [
  {
    name: 'Title',
    sortable: true,
    cell: row => <div><div style={{ fontWeight: 700 }}>{row.title}</div>{row.summary}</div>,
  },
  {
    name: 'Year',
    selector: 'year',
    sortable: true,
    right: true,
  },
];

...

// The row data is composed into your custom expandable component via the data prop
const ExpanableComponent = ({ data }) => <img src={data.image} />;

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        data={data}
        selectableRows
        selectableRowsComponent={Checkbox}
        selectableRowsComponentProps={{ inkDisabled: true }}
        sortIcon={<FontIcon>arrow_downward</FontIcon>}
        onRowSelected={handleChange}
        expandableRows
        expandableDisabledField="expanderDisabled"
        expandableRowsComponent={<ExpanableComponent />}
      />
    )
  }
);

Optimizing for Performance and Caveats

Pre-optimizaton can be the root of all evil, however, there are some best practices you can adhere to that will ensure React Data Table (RDT) is giving you the performance that you expect.

Passing non-primitive props (objects, arrays and functions)

While RDT has internal optimizations to try and prevent re-renders on deeper internal components, it's up to you to make sure that you understand how React manages rendering when props/state change as well as how JavaScript determines equality for non-primitives. As a general rule, or if you are experiencing performance issues you should ensure that any non-primitive property that's passed into RDT is not re-created on every render cycyle. This is even more important when you have larger data sets or you are passing complex components and columns to DataTable.

Optimizing Class Components

You can typically achieve this by moving props such as objects, arrays, functions or other React compents that you pass to RDT outside of the render method. Additionally, RDT provides you with a memoize helper for cases where you are using a function to generate those values.

Examples of Optimizations

The following component will cause RDT to fully re-render everytime onRowSelected is triggered. Why? Becuase when setState is called it triggers myComponent to re-render which by design triggers a re-render on all child components i.e. DataTable. But luckily for you React optimally handles this descision on when and how to re-render DataTable and a full re-render should not occur as long as DataTable props are the same.

However, in the example below columns changes on every re-render becuase it's being re-created. This is due to referential equality checking, simply: columns[] !== columns[]. In other words, while both instances of columns contain the same elements, they are "different" arrays.

Bad

...
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import DataTable from 'react-data-table';

class MyComponent extends Component {
  updateState = state => {
    this.setState({ selectedRows: state.selectedRows }); // triggers MyComponet to re-render with new state
  }

  render () { // by design runs on every setState trigger
    // upon re-render columns array is recreated and thus causes DataTable to re-render
    const columns = [....];

    return (
      <DataTable
        data={data}
        columns={columns}
        onRowSelected={this.updateState}
        selectableRows
      />
    )
  }
}

A "solution" could be to declare any field that is a non primitive field outside of the render function so that it does not get recreated on every re-render cycle:

Good

...
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import DataTable from 'react-data-table';

const columns = [....]; // is only created once

class MyComponent extends Component {
  updateState = state => {
    this.setState({ selectedRows: state.selectedRows });
  }

  render () {

    return (
      <DataTable
        data={data}
        columns={columns}
        onRowSelected={this.updateState}
        selectableRows
      />
    )
  }
}

But that only works if you don't need to pass component props/methods to the column object. For example what if you want to attach an event handler to a button in the row using column.cell?

const columns = [;
  {
    cell: () => <Button raised primary onClick={this.handleAction}>Action</Button>,
    ignoreRowClick: true,
    allowOverflow: true,
    button: true,
  },
  ...
];

So how do we attach event handlers to our columns without having to place it in the render method and dealing with unnescessary re-renders?

  1. Create a columns function and pass the arguments needed
  2. Memoize the columns function

This way, when React checks if columns has changed columns will instead be the cached result (remember referential equality), thus no unnessesary re-render.

Got it? Let's try this again with the optimal solution:

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import DataTable, { memoize } from 'react-data-table';

const onRowSelected = memoize(handleAction => [
  ...
  {
    cell: () => <Button raised primary onClick={handleAction}>Action</Button>,
    ignoreRowClick: true,
    allowOverflow: true,
    button: true,
  },
  ...
]);

class MyComponent extends Component {
  updateState = state => {
    this.setState({ selectedRows: state.selectedRows });
  }

  render () {
    return (
      <DataTable
        data={data}
        columns={columns(this.updateState)}
        onRowSelected={this.updateState}
        selectableRows
      />
    );
  }
}

Notice that this.updateState does not require memoization. That's because this.updateState is defined as a class method and therefore only created once. This however, is a different matter with functional components.

Optimizing Functional Components

If you're building functional components in React 16.8+ you get access to React Hooks such as useMemo and useCallback. In this example, simply wrap columns in a useMemo callback and your updateState into useCallback:

import React, { useState, useMemo } from 'react';
import DataTable from 'react-data-table';

const MyComponentHook = () => {
  const [thing, setThing] = useState();
  const handleAction = value => setThing(value);
  // unklike class methods updateState will be re-created on each render pass, therefore, make sure that callbacks passed to onRowSelected are memoized using useCallback
  const updateState = useCallback(state => console.log(state));
  const columns = useMemo(() => [
    ...
    {
      cell: () => <Button raised primary onClick={handleAction}>Action</Button>,
      ignoreRowClick: true,
      allowOverflow: true,
      button: true,
    },
    ...
  ]);

  return (
    <DataTable
      data={data}
      columns={columns}
      onRowSelected={updateState}
      selectableRows
    />
  );
}

Theming

You can override or replace the default theme using the customTheme prop. Internally, this just deep merges your theme with the default theme.

For Example:

// Override the row default height
const mySweetTheme = {
  rows: {
    height: '64px'
  }
}

class MyComponent extends Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <DataTable
        title="Arnold Movies"
        columns={columns}
        customTheme={mySweetTheme}
      />
    )
  }
);

Refer to Default Theme for reference and avaiilable properties to override

CSS Overrides

If you would like to customize the layout components of React Data Table using styled-components (e.g. styled(DataTable)), or your favorite CSS, SCSS, LESS, etc.. pre-processor you may use the following classNames:

  • rdt_Table
  • rdt_TableRow
  • rdt_TableCol
  • rdt_TableCol_Sortable
  • rdt_TableCell
  • rdt_TableHeader
  • rdt_TableFooter
  • rdt_TableHead
  • rdt_TableHeadRow
  • rdt_TableBody
  • rdt_ExpanderRow

Development

Setup

Install the latest Node JS LTS and Yarn and simply run yarn or yarn install command in the root and stories directory.

It is advised to run the script whenever NPM packages are installed.

Local development

During development,

# watch and build new source changes
yarn start
# or serve *.stories.js files and manually test on the Storybook app
yarn storybook

Including NPM packages

This project uses two package.json structure.

Library dependencies -- <root_dir>/package.json

yarn add [package-name] --dev # for dev tools
yarn add [package-name] # for app

Storybook dependencies -- <root_dir>/stories/package.json

cd stories/
yarn add [package-name]

Lint

yarn lint # runs linter to detect any style issues (css & js)
yarn lint:css # lint only css
yarn lint:js # lint only js
yarn lint:js --fix # tries to fix js lint issues

Test

yarn test # runs functional/unit tests using Jest
yarn test --coverage # with coverage

Build

yarn build # builds sources at src/

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