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A simple class that helps you manage a MatTable, MatSort and MatPaginator in your component.

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JanMalch/ngx-material-table-mediator

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!! Development has moved to ngx-mat-table-mediator

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ngx-material-table-mediator

This library provides the following classes to help you manage a MatTable, MatSort and MatPaginator in your component. The data for the table comes from an observable.

  • MatTableMediator → The abstract base class that contains all the logic.
  • BasicTableMediator → An implementation of the MatTableMediator to have in your component.
  • ArrayTableMediator → This mediator takes an array as data and takes care of sorting and pagination on client side.
  • MediatedTableComponent → An abstract class for your component that takes away all the boilerplate code. [Recommended]

Installation

npm i ngx-material-table-mediator

Usage

You can create your own subclass of MatTableMediator, or use the provided implementations (see examples here and here).

The recommend approach is to use the MediatedTableComponent class. Here's all you need in your component (example 1, example 2).

@Component({
  selector: 'app-placeholder',
  templateUrl: './placeholder.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./placeholder.component.css']
}) //                                                  <trigger payload, table data>
export class PlaceholderComponent extends MediatedTableComponent<string, Comment> {
  columns = ['postId', 'id', 'name', 'email']; // set the columns for your table
  trigger$ = new BehaviorSubject<string>(""); // add a trigger to start fetching the data
  // the trigger$ helps you control the fetching via button clicks etc.
  // if you want to fetch right away and don't use this just put   = of(undefined)

  constructor(private http: HttpClient) {
    // specify which implementation you want to use
    // use a boolen flag to indicate initial loading status, to prevent ExpressionChangedAfterItHasBeenCheckedError errors
    super(ArrayTableMediator, true);
  }

  ngAfterViewInit() { // tslint:disable-line:use-life-cycle-interface
    this.initMediator(); // call this once in ngAfterViewInit, when the @ViewChild's are available
    // note that you don't have to write the @ViewChild's yourself!
  }

  // implement your fetch function with the provided data
  // this can be an HTTP call or getting store data
  // if you use the BasicTableMediator in the super call you should return an Observable<MediatorData<Comment>>
  fetch(payload: string,
        sortBy: string, sortDirection: SortDirection,
        pageIndex: number, pageSize: number): Observable<Array<Comment>> {
    return !!payload && payload.length > 0 ?
      this.http.get<Array<Comment>>(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/comments?postId=${payload}`) :
      this.http.get<Array<Comment>>(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/comments`);
  }
}

The HTML is entirely up to you. See an example here.

Note that the abstract component provides an isLoading$ observable, which automatically connects to the mediator. This helps you prevent common errors.

Mapping results

If you use the BasicTableMediator you might have to map your fetched data to the MediatorData interface.

return this.http.get<GithubApi>(requestUrl).pipe(
  map(response => ({
      data: response.items,
      total: response.total_count
    })
  )
);

See here.

Mediator class

You can access the mediator object in your component via this.mediator.

Hooks

The class provides the following hooks as observables, to react to certain events.

  • data$: Observable<Array<O>> → the data for the table. You do not have to connect the table with this Observable!
  • error$: Observable<Error> → any errors occurring while fetching. Note that the mediator will still work
  • isLoading$: Observable<boolean> → indicates loading
  • totalResults$: Observable<number> → total count of results that are available on the server
  • onResultsFound$: Observable<number> → only emits if results were found (x > 0)
  • onNoResultsFound$: Observable<void> → only emits if no results were found (x === 0)
  • onFetchBegin$: Observable<void> → only emits if loading has started. You might use this to hide previous errors

Your custom mediator

Besides the necessary implementations you can override the following methods, to implement custom behaviour.

  • handleResult(result: MediatorData<O>): void → This function gets called every time new data was fetched. It's responsible for feeding the data into the right places.
  • handleError(error: Error): Observable<MediatorData<O>> → This function handles any errors that occur while fetching the data. You can either safely handle the error and return replacement data or rethrow the error.
  • initDataFetch(): void → This is the mediator's core function and setups the logic.
  • initPageReset(): void → This function creates an internal observable to reset the paginator, if sorting or trigger payload changes.
  • ngOnInit(): void → This function initialises the page reset and the fetch function.
  • trackByFn(index: number, item: O): any → An optional function passed into the MatTable that defines how to track the items.

Since MatPaginator and MatSort are optional, the mediator has a few getter properties that ensure safe access:

sortChange$, sortActive, sortDirection, page$, pageIndex, pageSize

You can find an example of a custom Mediator class here.

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A simple class that helps you manage a MatTable, MatSort and MatPaginator in your component.

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