expand/collapse table rows with JQuery

JqueryHtmlCss

Jquery Problem Overview


I want to expand and collapse table rows when header columns is clicked. I only want to expand/collapse rows which are under the specific header (clicked).

Here is my table structure:

 <table border="0">
      <tr>
        <td colspan="2">Header</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td>data</td>
        <td>data</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td>data</td>
        <td>data</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td colspan="2">Header</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td>date</td>
        <td>data</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td>data</td>
        <td>data</td>
      </tr>
      <tr>
        <td>data</td>
        <td>data</td>
      </tr>
    </table>

Any thoughts on how can I accomplish this task. Using div this task seems quite simple, but I have tabular data which I want to manipulate.

One idea I can think of is to use css class in every row which distinguish rows in under each header and use JQuery to expand/collapse those rows only when header is clicked. But if my table has 10-15 headers then it seems difficult to keep track of css classes.

Please suggest a suitable way to achieve this.

Jquery Solutions


Solution 1 - Jquery

You can try this way:-

Give a class say header to the header rows, use nextUntil to get all rows beneath the clicked header until the next header.

###JS

$('.header').click(function(){
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header').slideToggle(1000);
});

###Html

<table border="0">
  <tr  class="header">
    <td colspan="2">Header</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>

##Demo

Another Example:

$('.header').click(function(){
   $(this).find('span').text(function(_, value){return value=='-'?'+':'-'});
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header').slideToggle(100); // or just use "toggle()"
});

##Demo

You can also use promise to toggle the span icon/text after the toggle is complete in-case of animated toggle.

$('.header').click(function () {
    var $this = $(this);
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header').slideToggle(100).promise().done(function () {
        $this.find('span').text(function (_, value) {
            return value == '-' ? '+' : '-'
        });
    });
});

.promise()

.slideToggle()

Or just with a css pseudo element to represent the sign of expansion/collapse, and just toggle a class on the header.

CSS:-

.header .sign:after{
  content:"+";
  display:inline-block;      
}
.header.expand .sign:after{
  content:"-";
}

JS:-

$(this).toggleClass('expand').nextUntil('tr.header').slideToggle(100);

##Demo

Solution 2 - Jquery

The easiest way to achieve this, without changing the HTML table-based structure, is to use a class-name on the tr elements containing a header, such as .header, to give:

<table border="0">
  <tr class="header">
    <td colspan="2">Header</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class="header">
    <td colspan="2">Header</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>date</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>data</td>
    <td>data</td>
  </tr>
</table>

And the jQuery:

// bind a click-handler to the 'tr' elements with the 'header' class-name:
$('tr.header').click(function(){
    /* get all the subsequent 'tr' elements until the next 'tr.header',
       set the 'display' property to 'none' (if they're visible), to 'table-row'
       if they're not: */
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header').css('display', function(i,v){
        return this.style.display === 'table-row' ? 'none' : 'table-row';
    });
});

JS Fiddle demo.

In the linked demo I've used CSS to hide the tr elements that don't have the header class-name; in practice though (despite the relative rarity of users with JavaScript disabled) I'd suggest using JavaScript to add the relevant class-names, hiding and showing as appropriate:

// hide all 'tr' elements, then filter them to find...
$('tr').hide().filter(function () {
    // only those 'tr' elements that have 'td' elements with a 'colspan' attribute:
    return $(this).find('td[colspan]').length;
    // add the 'header' class to those found 'tr' elements
}).addClass('header')
    // set the display of those elements to 'table-row':
  .css('display', 'table-row')
    // bind the click-handler (as above)
  .click(function () {
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header').css('display', function (i, v) {
        return this.style.display === 'table-row' ? 'none' : 'table-row';
    });
});

JS Fiddle demo.

References:

Solution 3 - Jquery

I expanded one of the answers, however my functionality is a bit different. In my version, different rows form different groups. And "header" row triggers collapsing/expanding of that particular group. Also, each individual subgroup memorizes state that its in. It might sound a bit confusing, you can test drive my version using jsfiddle. Hope this code snippets will be helpful to someone out there!

HTML

<table border="0">
  <tr>
      <th>Header 1</th>
      <th>Header 2</th>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td class='group1'>Group 1</td>
    <td>data 2</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group1'>
    <td>data 3</td>
    <td>data 4</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td class='group2'>Group 2</td>
    <td>data 2</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2'>
    <td>data 3</td>
    <td>data 4</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2'>
    <td class='sub_group1'>Sub Group 1</td>
    <td>data 6</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group1'>
    <td>data 7</td>
    <td>data 8</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group1'>
    <td>data 9</td>
    <td>data 10</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group1'>
    <td class='sub_sub_group1'>Sub Sub Group 1</td>
    <td>data 11</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group1 sub_sub_group1'>
    <td>data 12</td>
    <td>data 13</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group1 sub_sub_group1'>
    <td>data 14</td>
    <td>data 15</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2'>
    <td class='sub_group2'>Sub Group 2</td>
    <td>data 11</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group2'>
    <td>data 12</td>
    <td>data 13</td>
  </tr>
  <tr class='group2 sub_group2'>
    <td>data 14</td>
    <td>data 15</td>
  </tr>
</table>

CSS

table, tr, td, th
{
    border: 1px solid black;
    border-collapse:collapse;
}

img.button_open{
  content:url('http://code.stephenmorley.org/javascript/collapsible-lists/button-open.png');
  cursor:pointer;
}

img.button_closed{
  content: url('http://code.stephenmorley.org/javascript/collapsible-lists/button-closed.png');
  cursor:pointer;
}

JS

function CreateGroup(group_name)
{
    // Create Button(Image)
    $('td.' + group_name).prepend("<img class='" + group_name + " button_closed'> ");
    // Add Padding to Data
    $('tr.' + group_name).each(function () {
        var first_td = $(this).children('td').first();
        var padding_left = parseInt($(first_td).css('padding-left'));
        $(first_td).css('padding-left', String(padding_left + 25) + 'px');
    });
    RestoreGroup(group_name);
    
    // Tie toggle function to the button
    $('img.' + group_name).click(function(){
        ToggleGroup(group_name);
    });
}

function ToggleGroup(group_name)
{
    ToggleButton($('img.' + group_name));
    RestoreGroup(group_name);
}

function RestoreGroup(group_name)
{
    if ($('img.' + group_name).hasClass('button_open'))
    {
        // Open everything
        $('tr.' + group_name).show();
        
        // Close subgroups that been closed
        $('tr.' + group_name).find('img.button_closed').each(function () {
            sub_group_name = $(this).attr('class').split(/\s+/)[0];
            //console.log(sub_group_name);
            RestoreGroup(sub_group_name);
        });
    }
    
    if ($('img.' + group_name).hasClass('button_closed'))
    {
        // Close everything
        $('tr.' + group_name).hide();
    }
}

function ToggleButton(button)
{
    $(button).toggleClass('button_open');
    $(button).toggleClass('button_closed');
}

CreateGroup('group1');
CreateGroup('group2');
CreateGroup('sub_group1');
CreateGroup('sub_group2');
CreateGroup('sub_sub_group1');

DEMO

Solution 4 - Jquery

I liked the simplest answer provided. However, I didn't like the choppiness of the collapsing. So I combined a solution from this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/467336/how-to-use-slidedown-or-show-function-on-a-table-row to make it a smoother animation when the rows slide up or down. It involves having to wrap the content of each td in a div. This allows it to smoothly animate the collapsing. When the rows are expanded, it will replace the div, with just the content.

So here's the html:

<table>
<tr class="header">
	<td>CARS</td>
</tr>
<tr class="thing">
	<td>car</td>
</tr>
<tr class="thing">
	<td>truck</td>
</tr>
<tr class="header">
	<td>HOUSES</td>
</tr>
<tr class="thing">
	<td>split level</td>
</tr>
<tr class="thing">
	<td>trailer</td>
</tr>

And here's the js

$('.header').click(function(){
if($(this).hasClass("collapsed")){
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header')
    .find('td')
    .parent()
    .find('td > div')
    .slideDown("fast", function(){
        var $set = $(this);
        $set.replaceWith($set.contents());
    });
    $(this).removeClass("collapsed");
} else {
    $(this).nextUntil('tr.header')
    .find('td')
    .wrapInner('<div style="display: block;" />')
    .parent()
    .find('td > div')
    .slideUp("fast");
    $(this).addClass("collapsed");
}
});

Checkout this fiddle for an example https://jsfiddle.net/p9mtqhm7/52/

Solution 5 - Jquery

I would say using the data- attribute to match the headers with the elements inside it. Fiddle : http://jsfiddle.net/GbRAZ/1/

A preview of the HTML alteration :

   <tr class="header" id="header1">
    <td colspan="2">Header</td>
   </tr>
   <tr data-for="header1" style="display:none">
     <td>data</td>
     <td>data</td>
   </tr>
   <tr data-for="header1" style="display:none">
     <td>data</td>
     <td>data</td>
   </tr>

JS code :

$(".header").click(function () {
   $("[data-for="+this.id+"]").slideToggle("slow");
});

EDIT: But, it involves some HTML changes. so I dunno if thats what you wanted. A better way to structure this would be using <th> or by changing the entire html to use ul, ol, etc or even a div > span setup.

Solution 6 - Jquery

A JavaScript accordion does the trick.

This fiddle by W3Schools makes a simple task even more simple using nothing but javascript, which i partially reproduce below.

<head>
<style>
button.accordion {
    background-color: #eee;
    color: #444;
    font-size: 15px;
    cursor: pointer;
}

button.accordion.active, button.accordion:hover {
    background-color: #ddd; 
}

div.panel {
    padding: 0 18px;
    display: none;
    background-color: white;
}

div.panel.show {
    display: block;
}
</style>
</head><body>
<script>
var acc = document.getElementsByClassName("accordion");
var i;

for (i = 0; i < acc.length; i++) {
    acc[i].onclick = function(){
	this.classList.toggle("active");
	this.nextElementSibling.classList.toggle("show");
  }
}
</script>
...
<button class="accordion">Section 1</button>
<div class="panel">
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p>
</div>
...
<button class="accordion">Table</button>
<div class="panel">
  <p><table name="detail_table">...</table></p>
</div>
...
<button class="accordion"><table name="button_table">...</table></button>
<div class="panel">
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p>
  <table name="detail_table">...</table>
  <img src=...></img>
</div>
...
</body></html>

if using php, don't forget to convert " to '. You can also use tables of data inside the button and it will still work.

Solution 7 - Jquery

using jQuery it's easy...

 $('YOUR CLASS SELECTOR').click(function(){

            $(this).toggle();
});

Attributions

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