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table-for is a table builder for an array of objects, easily allowing overriding of how any aspect of the table is generated

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table-for

TableFor is a table builder for a collection of domain objects. It very easily allows the user to specify the columns to render and to override how the table, the header columns, the rows, and the columns are rendered.

Installation

Add this to your Gemfile.

gem "table-for"

Example

The following example is purposely complex (in many cases, there are easier ways to do what is shown) in order to show a wide range of features that TableFor is capable of:

<%= table_for @users, :table_html => { :class => "table table-hover table-bordered" },
                      :sortable => true,
                      :sort_url => sort_admin_users_path,
                      :link_namespace => :admin,
                      :data_row_html => {
                        :class => lambda { cycle('success', 'error', 'warning', 'info')},
                        :id => lambda { |user| "user-#{user.id}" }} do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Modify", :link_action => :edit %>
  <% table.column :data => "Show", :link_url => lambda { |user| admin_user_path(user) } %>
  <% table.column :data => "Show 2.0", :link => true %>
  <% table.column :email, :header => "Email Address" %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :formatter => :downcase %>
  <% table.column :last_name, :formatter => lambda { |last_name| last_name.upcase } %>
  <% table.column :created_at, :formatter => [:strftime, "%m/%d/%y %I:%M %p"] %>
  <% table.column :updated_at,
                  :header => lambda {
                    content_tag(:span, :class => "badge badge-success") do
                      "Last Updated"
                    end
                  },
                  :sortable => false,
                  :header_column_html => { :style => "background-color:orange" },
                  :data => lambda { time_ago_in_words table.current_row.updated_at } %>
  <% table.column :full_name, :header => "Full Name", :order => "last_name, first_name" do |user| %>
    <%= "#{user.first_name} #{user.last_name}" %>
  <% end %>
  <% table.header :full_name do |column, options| %>
    <%= table.header_sort_link(column, options) do %>
      <span class="label label-important">FULL NAME</span>
    <% end %>
  <% end %>
  <% table.column :data => "Delete", :link_method => :delete, :link_confirm => "Are you sure?" %>
  <% table.footer do %>
    <div class="pull-right">
      <%= will_paginate @users %>
    </div>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

Produces (with Twitter Bootstrap):

<img src=“https://raw.github.com/hunterae/table-for/master/example_table.png”>

For detailed instructions on how to run this example, along with comments on every line of the above table, check out the Example Details.

table_for options

The first argument to the table_for call will always be the array of domain objects. The second argument is a hash and is optional. It is any combination of the following options:

sortable

(defaults to false) Sets whether all columns are sortable by default. If this field is set to true, each column header will be generated as a link.

<%= table_for @users, :sortable => true %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
sort_url

(defaults to the current path) Sets the url for the header column links. This will only affect columns that are sortable.

<%= table_for @users, :sortable => true,
                      :sort_url => sort_admin_users_path %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
link_namespace

(defaults to nil) Sets the default namespace for any links generated in the columns. For example, a link_namespace of admin would try to build links within the admin namespace in the routes. This can be specified as a string, an array, a domain object, or a symbol,

<%= table_for @users, :link_namespace => [:admin, @post, :comments] %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :link => true %>
<% end %>
table_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the table element.

<%= table_for @users, :table_html => { :id => "my-table",
                                       :class => "table table-bordered",
                                       :cellpadding => 2 } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
thead_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the thead element. Note: If TableFor.config.thead_tag is set to nil, the thead surrounding element for the header row will not be rendered.

<%= table_for @users, :thead_html => { :id => "thead-id" } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
header_row_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the header row (tr) element.

<%= table_for @users, :header_row_html => { :style => 'color: orange' } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
header_column_html

(defaults to {}) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the header column (th) element. The values in this hash can each be a string or a Proc that takes (optionally) the column object as a parameter.

<%= table_for @users, :header_column_html =>
  { :style => "font-weight: bold",
    :class => lambda {|column| "#{column.name}_header" } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
tbody_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the tbody element. Note: If TableFor.config.tbody_tag is set to nil, the tbody surrounding element for the table data rows will not be rendered.

<%= table_for @users, :tbody_html => { :id => "body-id" } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
data_row_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to each data row element (tr). The values in this hash can each be a string or a Proc that takes (optionally) the current record as a parameter

<%= table_for @users, :data_row_html =>
  { :class => lambda { cycle('success', 'error', 'warning', 'info')}, 
    :id => lambda { |user| "user-#{user.id}" } } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
data_column_html

(defaults to {}) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the data column (td) element. The values in this hash can each be a string or a Proc that takes (optionally) the current_record and (also optionally) the column object as parameters

<%= table_for @users, :data_column_html =>
  { :style => "font-weight: bold", 
    :id => lambda { |record, column| "record-#{record.id}-#{column.name}"
  }} do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
tfoot_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the tfoot element. Note: If TableFor.config.tfoot_tag is set to nil, the tfoot surrounding element for the footer row will not be rendered.

<%= table_for @users, :tfoot_html => { :id => "tfoot-id" } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
footer_row_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the footer row (tr) element.

<%= table_for @users, :footer_row_html => { :style => 'color: orange' } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
footer_column_html

(defaults to nil) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the footer column (td) spanning the entire footer row.

<%= table_for @users, :footer_column_html =>
  { :style => 'color: orange' } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>

table_for column options

Each individual table column can specify it’s own set of options, which can override any options applied globally in the table options.

The first argument to the column is optional and represents the name of the column. If specified, it must be unique to the table, and TableFor will attempt to use this field to lookup the value to display in the record, as well as the name to apply to the header column.

For example, <% table.column :first_name %> will output the first_name field for each record passed to the table.

If a :header option is not specified for the individual column, it will use this first argument to check for a translation key to give the header of the column a name (see below under Internationalization). Failing to find a translation key, it will titleize “first_name” to “First Name” and use that label for the header of the column.

The second argument (or first argument if the name of the column is ommitted) to a table column is a hash and is also optional. It is any combination of the following options:

data

(defaults to nil, unless specified on the entire table) Either an object instance (on which #to_s will be invoked) or a Proc (which can optionally take the current row as an option), representing the text to be shown in the data cell of the column.

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Edit" %>
  <% table.column :name, :data =>
    lambda {|user| user.name.underscore.upcase } %>
<% end %>
formatter

(defaults to nil, unless specified on the entire table) Either a method name, and array with the method to invoke and its arguments, or a Proc (which will be passed the value requiring formatting, based on the current column’s name). The :formatter argument will only work if the column name has been specified. In such a case, the current iteration row will be sent the name of the column, and the resulting value will be what’s being formatted. If there is a simple method that needs to be applied to the result, that method name can be specified as the formatter, or a series of method names (shown in examples below):

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :id, :formatter => :ordinalize %>
  <% table.column :created_at, :formatter => [:strftime, "%m/%d/%Y"] %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :formatter =>
    lambda {|first_name| first_name.downcase } %>
  <%# THE FOLLOWING IS INVALID %>
  <% table.column :formatter => :ordinalize %>
<% end %>
header

(defaults to nil, unless specified on the entire table) Either false, an object instance (on which #to_s will be invoked) or a Proc (which can optionally take the current column as an option), representing the text to be shown in the header cell of the column. If the :header option is not specified, and no column name is specified (the first argument to the column), then no text will be displayed in the header cell.

<%= table_for @users,
  :header => lambda { |column| 
    I18n.t("tables.headers.#{column.name.to_s.underscore}",
      :default => column.name.to_s.titleize)
  } do |table| %>
  <% table.column :id, :header => false %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :header => "FIRST NAME" %>
  <% table.column :last_name %>
<% end %>
sortable

(defaults to false, unless specified on the entire table) Whether this particular column is sortable, which will render a sort link around the header name with a sort_mode field alternating between values ‘asc’, ‘desc’, and ‘reset’

<%= table_for @users, :sortable => true do |table| %>
  <% table.column :id, :sortable => false %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>
sort_url

(defaults to “”, a.k.a. the current url, unless specified on the entire table) The sort url that sort links should be generated with

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :sortable => true,
                               :sort_url => sort_admin_users_path %>
<% end %>
order

(defaults to the current column’s name) The sort order (either a string or symbol) that sort links should be generated with

<%= table_for @users, :sortable => true do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :order => :fname %>
  <% table.column :last_name, :order => "lname" %>
  <% table.column :full_name, :order => "lname,fname" %>
<% end %>

Note: In the last example, the controller would likely need to split the order param on the comma, and apply the sort_mode to each field in the split, i.e.

params[:order].split(",").map do |field|
  "#{field} #{params[:sort_mode]}"
end.join(",")
link_url

(defaults to nil, unless specified on the entire table) Either a string or a Proc (which can optionally take the current record being iterated on) which wraps the data columns content in a link.

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :id, :link_url =>
    lambda {|user| edit_admin_user_path(user) } %>
  <% table.column :header => false,
                  :data => "DELETE",
                  :link_method => :DELETE,
                  :link_url => lambda { |user| admin_user_path(user) } %>
<% end %>
link_action

(defaults to nil) An alternative to link_url, link_action takes advantage of Rails’ url_for method to generate the url to a specific action

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Edit", :link_action => :edit %>
  <% table.column :data => "Delete", :link_action => :delete
    # assuming there is a GET delete route defined %>
  <% table.column :data => "Show", :link => true %>
<% end %>
link_method

(defaults to nil) The HTML method to be used to trigger the link (GET/PUT/POST/DELETE)

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Delete", :link_method => :DELETE %>
<% end %>
link_confirm

(defaults to nil) A confirmation message (javascript) that will be displayed when the user clicks the link

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Delete", :link_method => :DELETE,
                  :link_confirm =>
                    "Are you sure you want to delete this user?" %>
<% end %>
link_html

(defaults to {}, unless specified on the entire table) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the link element.

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :data => "Delete", :link_method => :DELETE,
                  :link_html =>
                    {:style => "color: RED; font-weight: BOLD"} %>
<% end %>
link_namespace

(defaults to nil, unless specified on the entire table; normally this option would be specified on the entire table) Sets the namespace for the link. For example, a link_namespace of admin would try to build the link within the admin namespace in the routes. This can be specified as a string, an array, a domain object, or a symbol,

<%= table_for @users %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :link_namespace =>
    [:admin, @post, :comments], :link => true %>
<% end %>
link

(defaults to false) Sets whether the column’s content should render as a link (this can also be accomplished by setting :link_url, :link_action, :link_method, or :link_confirm). Set this to true if you are trying to render a show link, since specifying :link_action as :show would break the call to url_for.

<%= table_for @users %>
  <% table.column :id, :link => true %>
<% end %>
data_column_html

(defaults to {}, unless specified on the entire table) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the data column (td) element. The values in this hash can each be a string or a Proc that takes (optionally) the current_record and (also optionally) the column object as parameters

<%= table_for @users, :data_column_html =>
  { :style => "font-weight: bold", 
    :id => lambda { |record, column| "record-#{record.id}-#{column.name}"
  }} do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
  <% table.column :last_name, :data_column_html =>
    {:style => "color: red"} %>
<% end %>
header_column_html

(defaults to {}, unless specified on the entire table) Hash to specify the styles, classes, id, and other attributes applied to the header column (th) element. The values in this hash can each be a string or a Proc that takes (optionally) the column object as a parameter.

<%= table_for @users, :header_column_html =>
  { :style => "font-weight: bold",
    :class => lambda {|column| "#{column.name}_header" } %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
  <% table.column :last_name, :header_column_html =>
    {:style => "font-size: 20px"} %>
<% end %>

table_for header options

Should you require more control over how a particular header column renders, the default rendering for particular column can easily be replaced. This can be accomplish using the header method within a table_for declaration:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.header :first_name do %>
    Custom Header Code
  <% end %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
<% end %>

Note: to specify the :header_column_html (the styles / classes to be applied to the th element), this should still be done on the column call:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.header :first_name do %>
    <%= link_to "First Name", :sort_mode =>
      (params[:sort_mode] == "asc" ? "desc" :
        (params[:sort_mode] == "desc" ? "reset" : "asc")) %>
  <% end %>
  <% table.column :first_name, :header_column_html => {
    :class => 
       lambda { params[:sort_mode] == "asc" ? "sorting_asc" : 
                (params[:sort_mode] == "desc" ? "sorting_desc" : "sorting") }} %>
<% end %>

In the above example, the first name column header will cycle between classes of “sorting_asc”, “sorting_desc”, and “sorting”, while the sort link itself in the header will cycle between sort_mode parameters of “asc”, “desc”, and “reset”. (This is actually the default TableFor sorting behavior)

table_for footer options

There are two ways to specify a footer for a table.

The first way assumes takes care of rendering the :tfoot element (if TableFor.config.tfoot_tag has not been set to nil), the :tr element, and a single :td element that has its colspan set the number of columns in the table (i.e. it spans the full width of the table):

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
  <% table.column :last_name %>
  <% table.footer do %>
    <div class="pull-right">
      <%= will_paginate @users %>
    </div>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

The second approach will be described below under “Advanced: Replacing Table Definitions”

table_for configuration

Just as TableFor options can be configured “globally” a single table, it can be configured globally for all tables.

This is accomplished through the TableFor#setup method. Any options that can be specified in the table_for options can also be specified in an initializer method. For example, consider an application where all tables should automatically have the css class “table table-hover table-bordered”. This is easily accomplished in an initializer:

TableFor.setup do |config|
  config.table_html = { :class => "table table-hover table-bordered" }
end

Gotcha: At this time, you will not be able to configure any TableFor settings that rely on Rails cycles, as the cycle would be maintained globally and would produce unexpected results.

Besides the table_for options that may be configured globally, the following addition options may be set:

thead_tag

(defaults to :thead) Set this to nil if a thead_tag should not be rendered around the header row of the table.

tbody_tag

(defaults to :tbody) Set this to nil if a tbody tag should not be rendered around the body data rows of the table.

tfoot_tag

(defaults to :tfoot) Set this to nil if a tbody tag should not be rendered around the footer row of the table.

sort_modes

(defaults to [:asc, :desc]) Sets the order of sort_mode links. A particular sortable column will, by default, generate a sort link with sort_mode set to :asc. If the sort_mode is already :asc for that column, then it generate the sort link with sort_mode set to :desc. Finally, if the sort_mode is already :desc for that column, it will generate a sort link with sort_mode blank.

Internationalization

table-for can do some dirty job for you, if you are using i18n by common rails conventions. For example, you have following in your en.yml:

en:
  activerecord:
    attributes:
      user:
        id: '#'
        name: "Username"
        bio: "Short biography"

Then, table-for will automatically look up correct translations for column headers. If you are not familiar with i18n, you can always pass a custom header to the column:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :parent_name, header: "Mr. Smith" %>
<% end %>

ADVANCED: Replacing table definitions

Because TableFor was built on top of Blocks, you’ll have access to some really cool functionality, such as the ability to replace how any aspect of your table is defined and rendered.

If you take a cursory look at the file _table_for.html.erb, you see a series of “table.define” calls. These are defining the various elements of the table, and many are recursive definitions by nature.

For example, the call to “table.define :table”, has calls to “table.render :header”, “table.render :body”, and “table.render :footer”. Below the “table.define :table”, you’ll find the calls to “table.define :header”, “table.define :body”, and “table.define :footer”. It shouldn’t be hard to see the you’re defining the table html element, and the table is made up of a header, a body, and a footer. The header is made up a header row, the body is made up of data rows, and the footer is made up of a footer row. Each of those rows is broken down into further definitions.

A question worth asking then is what is really happening here:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :full_name do |user| %>
    Overriden: <%= "#{user.first_name} #{user.last_name}" %>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

By passing a block in the definition of the :full_name column, we are overriding the default definition for the full_name block (the default definition can be found here). Should we not have specified the block, it would have called #full_name on the user object for each row. But as it is, we’ve overridden the default behavior for this column.

Note: table.column is an alias to the #queue method, inherited from WithTemplate. It works very similar to the “table.define” calls, but preserves the order in which blocks are defined. Because the order of table columns is important, this is the reason for using #queue instead of #define.

Applying the above principle, it shouldn’t be much of a stretch to see that any piece of the TableFor definition may easily be replaced. For example, suppose we didn’t like the way footers are defined.

To replace this definition, simply #define a footer block:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
  <% table.column :last_name %>
  <% table.define :footer do %>
    <tfoot>
      <tr>
        <td colspan="<%= table.columns.length %>">
          <div class="pull-right">
            <%= will_paginate @users %>
          </div>
        </td>
      </tr>
    </tfoot>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

ADVANCED: Using “Before” and “After” hooks

Another benefit of TableFor being built on top of Blocks is the ability to define before and after blocks. Before blocks will render code before a particular named block is rendered; after blocks will render code after said block. So suppose we wanted to render an extra row after every data row rendered that provided some additional data. By examining the TableFor DTD, we can see the block responsible for rendering an individual data row is called :data_row. With this knowledge, we can easily render an extra row after each data_row:

<%= table_for @users do |table| %>
  <% table.column :first_name %>
  <% table.column :last_name %>
  <% table.after :data_row do %>
    <tr>
      <td colspan="<%= table.columns.length %>">
        Some extra data
      </td>
    </tr>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

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table-for is a table builder for an array of objects, easily allowing overriding of how any aspect of the table is generated

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