This is my first time using list.js and for some reason it is not working.
Here is a live example. http://hartslogmuseum.com/bookhjr10/test.php here is what its supp
When using list.js with tables you should add class="list"
to a <tbody>
tag instead of the <table>
tag.
So in your code change this part:
<table class="list table-bordered table-striped">
<tr>
to
<table class="table-bordered table-striped">
<tbody class="list">
<tr>
And don't forget to add a </tbody>
.
***Add php tag before you start php code in an html content.***
//You can refer to below example:
<div class="table-responsive">
<div id="catalog">
<input class="search" placeholder="Search" />
<button class="sort" data-sort="name">
Sort Name
</button>
<button class="sort" data-sort="cat">
Sort Category
</button>
<h2> Catalog </h2>
<table class="list table-bordered table-striped">
<tr>
<td> <h2 class="name">Name</h2> </td>
</tr>
<?php
$sql="SELECT * FROM country";
$resultSet = mysql_query($sql,$conn);
while($row = mysql_fetch_array($resultSet))
{?>
<tbody >
<tr><td class="name">
<?php
$i=0;
echo $row['cn_name'];
$i++;
}?>
</td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</div>
//Javascript
<script src="http://listjs.com/no-cdn/list.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var options = {
valueNames: [ 'name' ]//you can specify more columns by adding ,
};
var hackerList = new List('catalog', options);
</script>
You probably forgot one of the minimal requirements.
These seem the minimal requirements:
list.js
tbody
must have the class list
td
, not on the th
- although you can also add it to the th
).sort
data-sort
with a value matching the name of the column's class name to be sortedHere are a couple of list.js codepen examples using tables (this is from http://listjs.com/examples/add-get-remove):
Minimal code example:
see also on http://jsfiddle.net/d7fJs/
<!-- for a table with a parent div of id "my-cool-sortable-table-wrapper", -->
<!-- and columns of class names "gender", "age" & "city" -->
<div id="my-cool-sortable-table-wrapper">
<table>
<thead>
<th class="sort" data-sort="gender">Gender</th>
<th class="sort" data-sort="age">Age</th>
<th class="sort" data-sort="city">City</th>
</thead>
<tbody class="list">
<tr>
<td class="gender">male</td>
<td class="age">18</td>
<td class="city">Berlin</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="gender">female</td>
<td class="age">46</td>
<td class="city">Reykjavik</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="gender">female</td>
<td class="age">20</td>
<td class="city">Lisboa</td>
</tr>
<!-- and so on ...-->
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/list.js/1.1.1/list.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var options = {
valueNames: [ 'gender', 'age', 'city' ]
};
var contactList = new List('my-cool-sortable-table-wrapper', options);
</script>
Note: if the sorting behaves strangely - ie. the sorting is incorrect - it might be because you are missing one of the basic requirements. If you struggle, do a jsfiddle & ask your question on stackoverflow with a link to it.
If you want to avoid using this ID in the wrapping element, and use a custom selector instead, you can replace:
var contactList = new List('my-cool-sortable-table-wrapper', options);
By this:
var wrapperElement = $('.my .custom .selector');
var contactList = new List(wrapperElement[0], options);
see:
If you want to detect change events triggered by List.js
& act accordingly (here we update row class names accordingly)
contactList.on("updated", function(){
$('#my-cool-sortable-table-wrapper tr').removeClass('odd').filter(':visible:odd').addClass("odd");
})
List.js
handles different event types. See full list at the bottom of this page http://listjs.com/docs/list-api
Official documentation http://listjs.com/docs/options