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Introduction

The JavaScript API lets you manipulate and access tables from JavaScript. You can use this to create custom interactive controls for your table without the use of Shiny, or add cross-widget interactions beyond what Crosstalk provides.

Common use cases for the JavaScript API include:

  • Export buttons to download table data to a CSV file
  • Custom filter inputs located outside of the table
  • Toggle buttons for row grouping or row expansion

Example: CSV download button

library(htmltools)

htmltools::browsable(
  tagList(
    tags$button("Download as CSV", onclick = "Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table')"),

    reactable(
      MASS::Cars93[, 1:5],
      defaultPageSize = 5,
      elementId = "cars-table"
    )
  )
)

Using the JavaScript API

To use the JavaScript API, your table must first have a unique ID that distinguishes it from other tables:

Once your table has an ID, you can use any of the Reactable JavaScript functions with that table ID. For example, to download data from the cars-table table to a CSV file, the JavaScript code would look like this:

// Download the "cars-table" data to a CSV file named 'cars.csv'
Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table', 'cars.csv')

To try this out interactively, you can open your browser’s developer tools and run this function in the JavaScript console.

Creating custom interactive controls

Most users will likely want to use the JavaScript API through an interactive control, such as a button, so they could decide when to download the table data. Using HTML, you can create a <button> element with an onclick action that calls the Reactable JavaScript function.

This example uses the htmltools package to render a CSV download button. You can copy this code into an R console to view the output:

library(htmltools)

htmltools::browsable(
  tagList(
    tags$button("Download as CSV", onclick = "Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table', 'cars.csv')"),

    reactable(MASS::Cars93[, 1:5], elementId = "cars-table")
  )
)

Note: htmltools::browsable() is a convenient way to view the rendered HTML when copying code into the console. It isn’t required to render HTML in R Markdown documents or Shiny apps.

To reuse this button in other tables, you can also convert it into a function that generates download buttons:

library(htmltools)

csvDownloadButton <- function(tableId, label = "Download as CSV", filename = "data.csv") {
  htmltools::tags$button(
    label,
    onclick = sprintf("Reactable.downloadDataCSV('%s', '%s')", tableId, filename)
  )
}

htmltools::browsable(
  tagList(
    csvDownloadButton("cars-table", "Download as CSV", filename = "cars.csv"),

    reactable(MASS::Cars93[, 1:5], elementId = "cars-table")
  )
)

For more examples of custom controls that use the JavaScript API, check out the JavaScript API examples.

JavaScript API Reference

Reactable.downloadDataCSV()

Downloads the table data to a CSV file. The downloaded file will be named data.csv by default, but you can customize this using the optional filename argument.

The downloaded data will include any filters that have been applied, and exclude any sorting or grouping. Hidden columns will also be included, but this may be customizable in the future.

For further customization, you can use the options argument to only include specific columns, exclude column headers, change the field separator, or change the decimal separator (new in v0.4.0).

Reactable.downloadDataCSV(
  tableId: string,
  filename = "data.csv",
  // New in v0.4.0
  options?: {
    columnIds: string[],
    headers: true,
    sep: ',',
    dec: '.'
  }
)

Examples

// Download table data to a file named data.csv
Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table')

// Download table data to a file named cars93.csv
Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table', 'cars93.csv')

// Download table data to a tab-separated values file
Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table', 'cars93.tsv', { sep: '\t' })

// Download table data with custom columns and headers excluded
Reactable.downloadDataCSV('cars-table', 'cars93.csv', {
  columnIds: ['Model', 'Type'],
  headers: false
})

Reactable.getDataCSV()

New in v0.4.0

Gets the table data as a CSV string. Same as Reactable.downloadDataCSV() but does not download the data.

Reactable.getDataCSV(
  tableId: string,
  options?: {
    columnIds: string[],
    headers: true,
    sep: ',',
    dec: '.'
  }
)

Value

A string with the table data in CSV format.

Examples

// Get table data as a CSV string
const csv = Reactable.getDataCSV('cars-table')
console.log(csv)

// Get table data as a tab-separted values string
const tsv = Reactable.getDataCSV('cars-table', { sep: '\t' })
console.log(tsv)

Reactable.setSearch()

Sets the search value of a table. To clear the search, set the value to undefined.

Reactable.setSearch(
  tableId: string,
  value: any
)

Examples

// Set the search value to "midsize"
Reactable.setSearch('cars-table', 'midsize')

// Clear the search value
Reactable.setSearch('cars-table', undefined)

Reactable.setFilter()

Sets the filter value of a column. To clear the column filter, set the value to undefined.

Reactable.setFilter(
  tableId: string,
  columnId: string,
  value: any
)

Examples

// Set the filter value of the "Type" column to "midsize"
Reactable.setFilter('cars-table', 'Type', 'midsize')

// Clear the filter value of the "Type" column
Reactable.setFilter('cars-table', 'Type', undefined)

Reactable.setAllFilters()

Sets all column filter values in the table. To clear the column filters, set filters to an empty array, [].

Reactable.setAllFilters(
  tableId: string,
  filters: Array<{ id: string, value: any }>
)

Examples

// Set the column filters for the "Type" column
Reactable.setAllFilters('cars-table', [{ id: 'Type', value: 'midsize' }])

// Set the column filters for the "Type" and "Model" columns
Reactable.setAllFilters('cars-table', [
  { id: 'Type', value: 'midsize' },
  { id: 'Model', value: 'legend' }
])

// Clear all column filters
Reactable.setAllFilters([])

Reactable.toggleGroupBy()

Toggles the groupBy state for a column between grouped and ungrouped. To enable or disable grouping explicitly, set the optional isGrouped argument to true or false.

Reactable.toggleGroupBy(
  tableId: string,
  columnId: string,
  isGrouped?: boolean
)

Examples

// Toggle groupBy state for the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleGroupBy('cars-table', 'Type')

// Enable grouping for the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleGroupBy('cars-table', 'Type', true)

// Disable grouping for the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleGroupBy('cars-table', 'Type', false)

Reactable.setGroupBy()

Sets the groupBy columns for the table. To clear the groupBy columns, set columnIds to an empty array, [].

Reactable.setGroupBy(
  tableId: string,
  columnIds: string[]
)

Examples

// Set the groupBy columns to "Type" and "Manufacturer"
Reactable.setGroupBy('cars-table', ['Type', 'Manufacturer'])

// Clear the groupBy columns
Reactable.setGroupBy('cars-table', [])

Reactable.toggleAllRowsExpanded()

Toggles the expanded state of all rows in the table between expanded and collapsed. To expand or collapse rows explicitly, set the optional isExpanded argument to true or false.

Reactable.toggleAllRowsExpanded(
  tableId: string,
  isExpanded?: boolean
)

Examples

// Toggle expanded state for all rows
Reactable.toggleAllRowsExpanded('cars-table')

// Expand all rows
Reactable.toggleAllRowsExpanded('cars-table', true)

// Collapse all rows
Reactable.toggleAllRowsExpanded('cars-table', false)

Reactable.setMeta()

New in v0.4.0

Sets the custom metadata for the table. meta can either be an object with new values, or a function that takes the previous metadata object and returns new values.

New values are merged into the current metadata, so only the values specified in meta will be updated. To clear all metadata, set meta to undefined.

Reactable.setMeta(
  tableId: string,
  meta?: object | Function
)

Examples

// Set metadata, updating the values for the `count`, `enabled`, and `formatter` properties
Reactable.setMeta('cars-table', { count: 123, enabled: true, formatter: value => '$' + value })

// Set metadata using a function that increments `count` and toggles an `enabled` boolean
Reactable.setMeta('cars-table', prevMeta => {
  return { count: prevMeta.count + 1, enabled: !prevMeta.enabled }
})

// Clear metadata
Reactable.setMeta('cars-table', undefined)

Reactable.toggleHideColumn()

New in v0.4.0

Toggles the hidden state for a column between hidden and shown. To hide or show a column explicitly, set the optional isHidden argument to true or false.

Reactable.toggleHideColumn(
  tableId: string,
  columnId: string,
  isHidden?: boolean
)

Examples

// Toggle hidden state for the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleHideColumn('cars-table', 'Type')

// Hide the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleHideColumn('cars-table', 'Type', true)

// Show the "Type" column
Reactable.toggleHideColumn('cars-table', 'Type', false)

Reactable.setHiddenColumns()

New in v0.4.0

Sets the hidden columns for the table. columnIds can either be an array of column IDs, or a function that takes the previous hidden column IDs and returns new column IDs.

To clear the hidden columns, set columnIds to an empty array, [].

Reactable.setHiddenColumns(
  tableId: string,
  columnIds: string[] | Function
)

Examples

// Set the hidden columns to "Type" and "Manufacturer"
Reactable.setHiddenColumns('cars-table', ['Type', 'Manufacturer'])

// Set hidden columns using a function that adds "Type" to the existing hidden columns
Reactable.setMeta('cars-table', prevHiddenColumns => {
  return prevHiddenColumns.concat('Type')
})

// Clear the hidden columns
Reactable.setHiddenColumns('cars-table', [])

Reactable.setData()

New in v0.4.0

Updates the table data. data can either be in row or column format. In row format, data is an array of row objects. In column format, data is an object containing arrays of column values. data should have all the same columns as the original table data.

When updating data, the selected rows and current page will reset by default. All other state will persist, including sorting, filtering, and grouping state.

Reactable.setData(
  tableId: string,
  data: Array<object> | object
)

Examples

// Update data in row format
Reactable.setData('cars-table', [
  { Model: 'Legend', Type: 'Midsize' },
  { Model: 'Integra', Type: 'Small' }
])

// Update data in column format
Reactable.setData('cars-table', {
  Model: ['Legend', 'Integra'],
  Type: ['Midsize', 'Small']
})

Reactable.getState()

Gets the current state of a table.

Reactable.getState(tableId: string)

Value

An object with the following properties:

Property Example Description
sorted [{ id: "Petal.Length", desc: true }, ...] columns being sorted in the table
page 2 page index (zero-based)
pageSize 10 page size
pages 5 number of pages
filters [{ id: "Species", value: "petal" }] column filter values
searchValue "petal" table search value
selected [0, 1, 4] selected row indices (zero-based)
pageRows [{ Petal.Length: 1.7, Species: "setosa" }, ...] current row data on the page
sortedData [{ Petal.Length: 1.7, Species: "setosa" }, ...] current row data in the table (after sorting, filtering, grouping)
data [{ Petal.Length: 1.7, Species: "setosa" }, ...] original row data in the table
meta { custom: 123 } custom table metadata from reactable() (new in v0.4.0)
hiddenColumns ["Petal.Length"] columns being hidden in the table

Examples

Reactable.getState('cars-table')
// { page: 2, searchValue: 'petal', ... }

Reactable.onStateChange()

New in v0.4.0

Sets up a function that will be called whenever the table state changes.

listenerFn should be a function that takes the current table state, an object with properties described at state properties.

Reactable.onStateChange() can only be run when the table has finished rendering, which isn’t guaranteed to happen at page load time. To ensure that the table is ready before running Reactable.onStateChange(), you can either use htmlwidgets::onRender() for static widgets and Shiny outputs, or htmlwidgets::onStaticRenderComplete() for static widgets only.

Reactable.onStateChange(
  tableId: string,
  listenerFn: Function
)

Value

Reactable.onStateChange returns a function that can be called to cancel the listener function.

Examples

Reactable.onStateChange('cars-table', state => {
  console.log('selected rows:', state.selected)
})

// Cancel the listener function
const cancel = Reactable.onStateChange('cars-table', listenerFn)
cancel()
Static widgets
library(htmltools)

data <- MASS::Cars93[, c("Manufacturer", "Model", "Type", "Price")]

browsable(
  tagList(
    "Table state:",
    tags$pre(id = "tbl-state", "{}"),
    reactable(
      data,
      searchable = TRUE,
      selection = "multiple",
      onClick = "select",
      elementId = "tbl"
    ),
    htmlwidgets::onStaticRenderComplete("
      Reactable.onStateChange('tbl', state => {
        const { selected, sorted, searchValue, pageIndex } = state
        document.getElementById('tbl-state').textContent = JSON.stringify({
          selected,
          sorted,
          searchValue,
          pageIndex
        })
      })
    ")
  )
)
Shiny outputs
library(shiny)

data <- MASS::Cars93[, c("Manufacturer", "Model", "Type", "Price")]

ui <- fluidPage(
  reactableOutput("tbl"),
  verbatimTextOutput("tbl_state")
)

server <- function(input, output) {
  output$tbl <- renderReactable({
    tbl <- reactable(data, searchable = TRUE)

    htmlwidgets::onRender(tbl, "() => {
      Reactable.onStateChange('tbl', state => {
        const { sorted, searchValue } = state
        Shiny.setInputValue('tbl_state', { sorted, searchValue })
      })
    }")
  })

  output$tbl_state <- renderPrint({
    writeLines("Table state:\n")
    print(input$tbl_state)
  })
}

shinyApp(ui, server)

Reactable.gotoPage()

New in v0.4.4.9000

Changes the current page. pageIndex can either be a number or a function that takes the previous pageIndex and returns the new value.

pageIndex is zero-based, so the first page would have a pageIndex of 0. If pageIndex is outside the valid pageIndex range, Reactable.gotoPage() will do nothing.

Reactable.gotoPage(
  tableId: string,
  pageIndex?: number | Function
)

Examples

// Go to page index 0 (the first page)
Reactable.gotoPage('cars-table', 0)

// Go to page index 2 (the third page)
Reactable.gotoPage('cars-table', 2)

// Go to the next page
Reactable.gotoPage('cars-table', prevPage => prevPage + 1)

// Go to the previous page
Reactable.gotoPage('cars-table', prevPage => prevPage - 1)

Reactable.setPageSize()

New in v0.4.4.9000

Sets the current page size.

Reactable.gotoPage(
  tableId: string,
  pageSize?: number
)

Examples

// Set the page size to 10
Reactable.setPageSize('cars-table', 10)