react-pivottable is a React-based pivot table library with drag'n'drop
functionality. It is a React port of the jQuery-based
PivotTable.js by the same author.
react-pivottable is part of Plotly's React Component Suite for building data visualization Web apps and products.
react-pivottable's function is to enable data exploration and analysis by
summarizing a data set into table or Plotly.js
chart with a true 2-d drag'n'drop UI, very similar to the one found in older
versions of Microsoft Excel.
A live demo can be found here.
Installation is via NPM and has a peer dependency on React:
npm install --save react-pivottable react react-dom
Basic usage is as follows. Note that PivotTableUI is a "dumb component" that
maintains essentially no state of its own.
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import PivotTableUI from 'react-pivottable/PivotTableUI';
import 'react-pivottable/pivottable.css';
// see documentation for supported input formats
const data = [['attribute', 'attribute2'], ['value1', 'value2']];
class App extends React.Component {
    constructor(props) {
        super(props);
        this.state = props;
    }
    render() {
        return (
            <PivotTableUI
                data={data}
                onChange={s => this.setState(s)}
                {...this.state}
            />
        );
    }
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.body);The Plotly react-plotly.js component can be passed in via dependency
injection. It has a peer dependency on plotly.js.
Important: If you build your project using webpack, you'll have to follow
these instructions
in order to successfully bundle plotly.js. See below for how to avoid having
to bundle plotly.js.
npm install --save react-pivottable react-plotly.js plotly.js react react-dom
To add the Plotly renderers to your app, you can use the following pattern:
import React from 'react';
import PivotTableUI from 'react-pivottable/PivotTableUI';
import 'react-pivottable/pivottable.css';
import TableRenderers from 'react-pivottable/TableRenderers';
import Plot from 'react-plotly.js';
import createPlotlyRenderers from 'react-pivottable/PlotlyRenderers';
// create Plotly renderers via dependency injection
const PlotlyRenderers = createPlotlyRenderers(Plot);
// see documentation for supported input formats
const data = [['attribute', 'attribute2'], ['value1', 'value2']];
class App extends React.Component {
    constructor(props) {
        super(props);
        this.state = props;
    }
    render() {
        return (
            <PivotTableUI
                data={data}
                onChange={s => this.setState(s)}
                renderers={Object.assign({}, TableRenderers, PlotlyRenderers)}
                {...this.state}
            />
        );
    }
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.body);If you would rather not install and bundle plotly.js but rather get it into
your app via something like <script> tag, you can ignore react-plotly.js'
peer-dependcy warning and handle the dependency injection like this:
import React from 'react';
import PivotTableUI from 'react-pivottable/PivotTableUI';
import 'react-pivottable/pivottable.css';
import TableRenderers from 'react-pivottable/TableRenderers';
import createPlotlyComponent from 'react-plotly.js/factory';
import createPlotlyRenderers from 'react-pivottable/PlotlyRenderers';
// create Plotly React component via dependency injection
const Plot = createPlotlyComponent(window.Plotly);
// create Plotly renderers via dependency injection
const PlotlyRenderers = createPlotlyRenderers(Plot);
// see documentation for supported input formats
const data = [['attribute', 'attribute2'], ['value1', 'value2']];
class App extends React.Component {
    constructor(props) {
        super(props);
        this.state = props;
    }
    render() {
        return (
            <PivotTableUI
                data={data}
                onChange={s => this.setState(s)}
                renderers={Object.assign({}, TableRenderers, PlotlyRenderers)}
                {...this.state}
            />
        );
    }
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.body);- <PivotTableUI {...props} />- <PivotTable {...props} />- <Renderer {...props} />- PivotData(props)
 
 
 
The interactive component provided by react-pivottable is PivotTableUI, but
output rendering is delegated to the non-interactive PivotTable component,
which accepts a subset of its properties. PivotTable can be invoked directly
and is useful for outputting non-interactive saved snapshots of PivotTableUI
configurations. PivotTable in turn delegates to a specific renderer component,
such as the default TableRenderer, which accepts a subset of the same
properties. Finally, most renderers will create non-React PivotData object to
handle the actual computations, which also accepts a subset of the same props as
the rest of the stack.
Here is a table of the properties accepted by this stack, including an indication of which layer consumes each, from the bottom up:
| Layer | Key & Type | Default Value | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|
| PivotData | datasee below for formats | (none, required) | data to be summarized | 
| PivotData | rowsarray of strings | [] | attribute names to prepopulate in row area | 
| PivotData | colsarray of strings | [] | attribute names to prepopulate in cols area | 
| PivotData | valsarray of strings | [] | attribute names used as arguments to aggregator (gets passed to aggregator generating function) | 
| PivotData | aggregatorsobject of functions | aggregatorsfromUtilites | dictionary of generators for aggregation functions in dropdown (see original PivotTable.js documentation) | 
| PivotData | aggregatorNamestring | first key in aggregators | key to aggregatorsobject specifying the aggregator to use for computations | 
| PivotData | valueFilterobject of arrays of strings | {} | object whose keys are attribute names and values are objects of attribute value-boolean pairs which denote records to include or exclude from computation and rendering; used to prepopulate the filter menus that appear on double-click | 
| PivotData | sortersobject or function | {} | accessed or called with an attribute name and can return a function which can be used as an argument to array.sortfor output purposes. If no function is returned, the default sorting mechanism is a built-in "natural sort" implementation. Useful for sorting attributes like month names, see original PivotTable.js example 1 and original PivotTable.js example 2. | 
| PivotData | rowOrderstring | "key_a_to_z" | the order in which row data is provided to the renderer, must be one of "key_a_to_z","value_a_to_z","value_z_to_a", ordering by value orders by row total | 
| PivotData | colOrderstring | "key_a_to_z" | the order in which column data is provided to the renderer, must be one of "key_a_to_z","value_a_to_z","value_z_to_a", ordering by value orders by column total | 
| PivotData | derivedAttributesobject of functions | {} | defines derived attributes (see original PivotTable.js documentation) | 
| Renderer | <any> | (none, optional) | Renderers may accept any additional properties | 
| PivotTable | renderersobject of functions | TableRenderers | dictionary of renderer components | 
| PivotTable | rendererNamestring | first key in renderers | key to renderersobject specifying the renderer to use | 
| PivotTableUI | onChangefunction | (none, required) | function called every time anything changes in the UI, with the new value of the properties needed to render the new state. This function must be hooked into a state-management system in order for the "dumb" PivotTableUIcomponent to work. | 
| PivotTableUI | hiddenAttributesarray of strings | [] | contains attribute names to omit from the UI | 
| PivotTableUI | hiddenFromAggregatorsarray of strings | [] | contains attribute names to omit from the aggregator arguments dropdowns | 
| PivotTableUI | hiddenFromDragDroparray of strings | [] | contains attribute names to omit from the drag'n'drop portion of the UI | 
| PivotTableUI | menuLimitinteger | 500 | maximum number of values to list in the double-click menu | 
| PivotTableUI | unusedOrientationCutoffinteger | 85 | If the attributes' names' combined length in characters exceeds this value then the unused attributes area will be shown vertically to the left of the UI instead of horizontally above it. 0therefore means 'always vertical', andInfinitymeans 'always horizontal'. | 
One object per record, the object's keys are the attribute names.
Note: missing attributes or attributes with a value of null are treated as
if the value was the string "null".
const data = [
    {
        attr1: 'value1_attr1',
        attr2: 'value1_attr2',
        //...
    },
    {
        attr1: 'value2_attr1',
        attr2: 'value2_attr2',
        //...
    },
    //...
];One sub-array per record, the first sub-array contains the attribute names. If
subsequent sub-arrays are shorter than the first one, the trailing values are
treated as if they contained the string value "null". If subsequent sub-arrays
are longer than the first one, excess values are ignored. This format is
compatible with the output of CSV parsing libraries like PapaParse.
const data = [
    ['attr1', 'attr2'],
    ['value1_attr1', 'value1_attr2'],
    ['value2_attr1', 'value2_attr2'],
    //...
];The function will be called with a callback that takes an object as a parameter.
Note: missing attributes or attributes with a value of null are treated as
if the value was the string "null".
const data = function(callback) {
    callback({
        "attr1": "value1_attr1",
        "attr2": "value1_attr2",
        //...
    });
    callback({
        "attr1": "value2_attr1",
        "attr2": "value2_attr2",
        //...
    };
    //...
}; 
  