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TypeScript Examples
Below is a very basic example when using TypeScript
For the grid to work, it has to have a defined height
OR you could also use the autoHeight
grid option
note: be aware that the
autoHeight
disables the Virtual Scroll which can be a problem with large dataset, you typically want to use this option with small dataset only
<div id="myGrid" class="slick-container alpine-theme" style="width:100%; height:500px;"></div>
Create the grid and reference the div (#myGrid
in our use case) and again make sure that your grid has a defined height (by either a height
on your div OR use the autoHeight
grid option)
// example.ts (TypeScript file)
import { Column, GridOption, SlickDataView, SlickGrid } from 'slickgrid';
let data: any[] = [];
let columns: Column[] = [{ id: 'firstName', name: 'First Name', field: 'firstName' }, /* ... */ ];
let options: GridOption = { enableCellNavigation: true, /* ... */ };
let grid = new SlickGrid('#myGrid', data, columns, options);
// or similarly for DataView
let dataView = new SlickDataView({ inlineFilter: true });
let grid = new SlickGrid('#myGrid', dataView, columns, options);
You could also make it better by providing data types via TypeScript Generics on the SlickGrid class, so that any SlickGrid/SlickDataView will now be typed when retrieving any data context, i.e. grid.getDataItem(0)
will be inferred as a User
type
// example.ts (TypeScript file)
import { Column, GridOption, SlickDataView, SlickGrid } from 'slickgrid';
interface User {
id: string;
firstName: string;
lastName: string;
age?: number;
}
let data: User[] = [];
let columns: Column[] = [{ id: 'firstName', name: 'First Name', field: 'firstName' }, /* ... */ ];
let options: GridOption = { enableCellNavigation: true, /* ... */ };
let grid = new SlickGrid<User>('#myGrid', data, columns, options);
const item = grid.getDataItem(0); // inferred as a User type
// or similarly when using a DataView
let dataView = new SlickDataView<User>({ inlineFilter: true });
let grid = new SlickGrid<User>('#myGrid', dataView, columns, options);
const item = dataView.getItemByIdx(0); // inferred as a User type
All core, controls and plugins files are exported with the Slick
prefix (i.e. SlickGrid
, SlickDataView
, SlickColumnPicker
, ...) with some exceptions (Aggregators
, Editors
, Formatters
and all enums like ColAutosizeMode
, RowSelectionMode
, ...)
For example
import {
// all Grouping stuffs are without the `Slick` prefix
Aggregators,
Editors,
Formatters,
// all enums/types are also without the `Slick` prefix
ColAutosizeMode,
RowSelectionMode,
Utils,
// everything else... that is all core, controls & plugins starts with `Slick` prefix
SlickGlobalEditorLock,
SlickRowSelectionModel,
SlickColumnPicker,
SlickDataView,
SlickGridPager,
SlickGrid,
} from 'slickgrid';
Since we now use TypeScript, we can also get extra features for free, because we now have Types (interfaces, enums, types, ...), Generics and it's even easily extendable as shown below.
We added optional TS Generics to provide item data context interface on the SlickGrid
and/or SlickDataView
so that you can call any methods from them and automatically get the associated item interface types for them.
import { SlickGrid, SlickDataView } from 'slickgrid';
interface User {
firstName: string;
lastName: string;
age: number;
}
// Generics on SlickGrid
const grid = new SlickGrid<User>('#myGrid', data, columns, options);
const item = grid.getDataItem(0); // item will be User TS type
// or Generics on SlickDataView
const dataView = new SlickDataView<User>();
const grid = new SlickGrid('#myGrid', dataView, columns, options);
const item = dataView.getItemByIdx(0); // item will be User TS type
The SlickGrid class actually has 3 optional Generics, but you will rarely use the last 2. The 1st Generic is the item type (as shown above), the 2nd is if you want to extend the Column
interface and finally the 3rd and last Generic is if you want to extend the GridOption
interface (these extra Generics were mainly added for Slickgrid-Universal since that library also has extra Column & GridOption properties)
Since we opted to use protected
(instead of private
) across all our TypeScript code, it makes it easy to extends
any of these TS classes whenever you wish to customize or add extra methods on any of the SlickGrid
classes (not just core files but also Controls and Plugins as well).
// for example let's extend Slick DataView
import { SlickDataView } from 'slickgrid';
class CustomSlickDataView extends SlickDataView {
// for example let's add a custom event on the destroy method
onDestroy = new SlickEvent();
constructor() {
super();
}
destroy() {
super.destroy();
this.onDestroy.notify();
}
}
// use our new extended DataView
const dv = new CustomSlickDataView();
dv.onDestroy.subscribe(() => console.log('DataView was destroyed'));
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