Dan Dascalescu
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10 years ago | |
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example | 10 years ago | |
README.md | 10 years ago | |
methods-client.js | 10 years ago | |
methods-server.js | 10 years ago | |
package.js | 10 years ago | |
publish.sh | 10 years ago | |
reactivize.js | 10 years ago | |
runtests.sh | 10 years ago | |
template.html | 10 years ago | |
test.js | 10 years ago |
README.md
Reactive reorderable lists with Sortable, backed by Meteor.js collections:
- new elements arriving in the collection will update the list as you expect
- elements removed from the collection will be removed from the list
- drag and drop between lists updates collections accordingly
Demo: http://rubaxa-sortable.meteor.com
Meteor
If you're new to Meteor, here's what the excitement is all about - watch the first two minutes; you'll be hooked by 1:28. That screencast is from 2012. In the meantime, Meteor has become a mature JavaScript-everywhere web development framework. Read more at Why Meteor.
Usage
Simplest invocation - order will be lost when the page is refreshed:
{{#sortable <collection|cursor|array>}}
Persist the sort order in the 'order' field of each document in the collection:
Client:
{{#sortable items=<collection|cursor|array> sortField="order"}}
Server:
Sortable.collections = <collectionName>; // the name, not the variable
Along with items
, sortField
is the only Meteor-specific option. If it's missing, the package will
assume there is a field called "order" in the collection, holding unique Number
s such that every
order
differs from that before and after it by at least 1. Basically, keep to 0, 1, 2, ... .
Try not to depend on a particular format for this field; it is though guaranteed that a sort
will
produce lexicographical order, and that the order will be maintained after an arbitrary number of
reorderings, unlike with naive solutions.
Remember to declare on the server which collections you want to be reorderable from the client. Otherwise, the library will error because the client would be able to modify numerical fields in any collection, which represents a security risk.
Passing options to the Sortable library
{{#sortable items=<collection|cursor|array> option1=value1 option2=value2...}}
{{#sortable items=<collection|cursor|array> options=myOptions}}
For available options, please refer to the main README. You can pass them directly
or under the options
object. Direct options (key=value
) override those in options
. It is best
to pass presentation-related options directly, and functionality-related settings in an options
object, as this will enable designers to work without needing to inspect the JavaScript code:
<template name="myTemplate">
...
{{#sortable items=Players handle=".sortable-handle" ghostClass="sortable-ghost" options=playerOptions}}
</template>
Define the options in a helper for the template that calls Sortable:
Template.myTemplate.helpers({
playerOptions: function () {
return {
group: {
name: "league",
pull: true,
put: false
},
sort: false
};
}
});
Events
All the original Sortable events are supported. In addition, they will receive
the data context in event.data
. You can access event.data.order
this way:
{{#sortable items=players options=playersOptions}}
Template.myTemplate.helpers({
playersOptions: function () {
return {
onSort: function(/**Event*/event) {
console.log('Moved player #%d from %d to %d',
event.data.order, event.oldIndex, event.newIndex
);
}
};
}
});
Issues
If you encounter an issue while using this package, please CC @dandv when you file it in this repo.
TODO
- Array support
- Tests
- Misc. - see reactivize.js
- GitHub issues