Simple inline editing
Editor has three different Editor modes:
- Primary editing
- Bubble editing
- Inline editing
Inline editing, as shown demonstrated in this section, is designed to allow rapid editing of individual fields in a table. The most common use case is to simply click on the cell you want to edit and then hit return once the edit is complete. This will save the data and the row will be immediately updated.
This example shows inline editing on all data columns in the table. The primary editing interface of Editor is also still available, with row selection
being made available by clicking in the first column (the checkbox shown is provided by Select's select-checkbox
column class). In this manner you get the benefits of rapid editing as well as the ability to create, edit
and delete full records very easily.
Inline editing in Editor is activated through the use of the inline()
API method. Simply call the method and pass in the cell you want to edit as the first parameter. Editor will attempt to
automatically determine which parameter is to be edited. Alternatively, or if Editor is unable to determine the field automatically, use the second parameter
to tell it which field to edit.
First name | Last name | Position | Office | Start date | Salary |
---|
- Javascript
- HTML
- CSS
- Ajax
- Server-side script
- Comments
The Javascript shown below is used to initialise the table shown in this example:
var editor; // use a global for the submit and return data rendering in the examples
$(document).ready(function() {
editor = new $.fn.dataTable.Editor( {
ajax: "../php/staff.php",
table: "#example",
fields: [ {
label: "First name:",
name: "first_name"
}, {
label: "Last name:",
name: "last_name"
}, {
label: "Position:",
name: "position"
}, {
label: "Office:",
name: "office"
}, {
label: "Extension:",
name: "extn"
}, {
label: "Start date:",
name: "start_date",
type: "datetime"
}, {
label: "Salary:",
name: "salary"
}
]
} );
// Activate an inline edit on click of a table cell
$('#example').on( 'click', 'tbody td:not(:first-child)', function (e) {
editor.inline( this );
} );
$('#example').DataTable( {
dom: "Bfrtip",
ajax: "../php/staff.php",
order: [[ 1, 'asc' ]],
columns: [
{
data: null,
defaultContent: '',
className: 'select-checkbox',
orderable: false
},
{ data: "first_name" },
{ data: "last_name" },
{ data: "position" },
{ data: "office" },
{ data: "start_date" },
{ data: "salary", render: $.fn.dataTable.render.number( ',', '.', 0, '$' ) }
],
select: {
style: 'os',
selector: 'td:first-child'
},
buttons: [
{ extend: "create", editor: editor },
{ extend: "edit", editor: editor },
{ extend: "remove", editor: editor }
]
} );
} );
In addition to the above code, the following Javascript library files are loaded for use in this example:
The HTML shown below is the raw HTML table element, before it has been enhanced by DataTables:
This example uses a little bit of additional CSS beyond what is loaded from the library files (below), in order to correctly display the table. The additional CSS used is shown below:
The following CSS library files are loaded for use in this example to provide the styling of the table:
This table loads data by Ajax. The latest data that has been loaded is shown below. This data will update automatically as any additional data is loaded.
The script used to perform the server-side processing for this table is shown below. Please note that this is just an example script using PHP. Server-side processing scripts can be written in any language, using the protocol described in the DataTables documentation.
Other examples
Advanced initialisation
- Data shown only in the form
- Data shown in table only
- Multi-item editing (rows, columns, cells)
- REST interface
- Complex (nested) JSON data source
- Ajax override - using localStorage for the data source
- Row ID source specification
- Compound database primary key
- SQL VIEW
- DOM sourced table
- Join tables - self referencing join
- Join tables - link table
- Join tables - one-to-many join
- File upload
- File upload (many)