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@0xclearview/svelte-tiny-virtual-table

v0.0.4

Published

A tiny but mighty list virtualization component for svelte, with zero dependencies 💪

Downloads

5

Readme

About

Instead of rendering all your data in a huge list, the virtual list component just renders the items that are visible, keeping your page nice and light. This is heavily inspired by react-tiny-virtual-table and uses most of its code and functionality!

Features

  • Tiny & dependency free – Only ~5kb gzipped
  • Render millions of items, without breaking a sweat
  • Scroll to index or set the initial scroll offset
  • Supports fixed or variable heights/widths
  • Vertical or Horizontal lists
  • svelte-infinite-loading compatibility

Installation

If you're using this component in a Sapper application, make sure to install the package to devDependencies! More Details

With npm:

$ npm install svelte-tiny-virtual-table

With yarn:

$ yarn add svelte-tiny-virtual-table

With pnpm (recommended):

$ npm i -g pnpm
$ pnpm install svelte-tiny-virtual-table

From CDN (via unpkg):

<!-- UMD -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/svelte-tiny-virtual-table@^1/dist/svelte-tiny-virtual-table.js"></script>

<!-- ES Module -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/svelte-tiny-virtual-table@^1/dist/svelte-tiny-virtual-table.mjs"></script>

Usage

<script>
	import VirtualTable from 'svelte-tiny-virtual-table';

	const data = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' /* ... */];
</script>

<VirtualTable width="100%" height={600} itemCount={data.length} itemSize={50}>
	<div slot="item" let:index let:style {style}>
		Letter: {data[index]}, Row: #{index}
	</div>
</VirtualTable>

Also works pretty well with svelte-infinite-loading:

<script>
	import VirtualTable from 'svelte-tiny-virtual-table';
	import InfiniteLoading from 'svelte-infinite-loading';

	let data = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' /* ... */];

	function infiniteHandler({ detail: { complete, error } }) {
		try {
			// Normally you'd make an http request here...

			const newData = ['G', 'H', 'I', 'J', 'K', 'L' /* ... */];

			data = [...data, ...newData];
			complete();
		} catch (e) {
			error();
		}
	}
</script>

<VirtualTable width="100%" height={600} itemCount={data.length} itemSize={50}>
	<div slot="item" let:index let:style {style}>
		Letter: {data[index]}, Row: #{index}
	</div>

	<div slot="footer">
		<InfiniteLoading on:infinite={infiniteHandler} />
	</div>
</VirtualTable>

Props

| Property | Type | Required? | Description | | ----------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | :-------: | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | width | number \| string* | ✓ | Width of List. This property will determine the number of rendered items when scrollDirection is 'horizontal'. | | height | number \| string* | ✓ | Height of List. This property will determine the number of rendered items when scrollDirection is 'vertical'. | | itemCount | number | ✓ | The number of items you want to render | | itemSize | number \| number[] \| (index: number) => number | ✓ | Either a fixed height/width (depending on the scrollDirection), an array containing the heights of all the items in your list, or a function that returns the height of an item given its index: (index: number): number | | scrollDirection | string | | Whether the list should scroll vertically or horizontally. One of 'vertical' (default) or 'horizontal'. | | scrollOffset | number | | Can be used to control the scroll offset; Also useful for setting an initial scroll offset | | scrollToIndex | number | | Item index to scroll to (by forcefully scrolling if necessary) | | scrollToAlignment | string | | Used in combination with scrollToIndex, this prop controls the alignment of the scrolled to item. One of: 'start', 'center', 'end' or 'auto'. Use 'start' to always align items to the top of the container and 'end' to align them bottom. Use 'center' to align them in the middle of the container. 'auto' scrolls the least amount possible to ensure that the specified scrollToIndex item is fully visible. | | scrollToBehaviour | string | | Used in combination with scrollToIndex, this prop controls the behaviour of the scrolling. One of: 'auto', 'smooth' or 'instant' (default). | | stickyIndices | number[] | | An array of indexes (eg. [0, 10, 25, 30]) to make certain items in the list sticky (position: sticky) | | overscanCount | number | | Number of extra buffer items to render above/below the visible items. Tweaking this can help reduce scroll flickering on certain browsers/devices. | | estimatedItemSize | number | | Used to estimate the total size of the list before all of its items have actually been measured. The estimated total height is progressively adjusted as items are rendered. | | getKey | (index: number) => any | | Function that returns the key of an item in the list, which is used to uniquely identify an item. This is useful for dynamic data coming from a database or similar. By default, it's using the item's index. |

* height must be a number when scrollDirection is 'vertical'. Similarly, width must be a number if scrollDirection is 'horizontal'

Slots

  • item - Slot for each item
    • Props:
      • index: number - Item index
      • style: string - Item style, must be applied to the slot (look above for example)
  • header - Slot for the elements that should appear at the top of the list
  • footer - Slot for the elements that should appear at the bottom of the list (e.g. InfiniteLoading component from svelte-infinite-loading)

Events

  • afterScroll - Fired after handling the scroll event
    • detail Props:
      • event: ScrollEvent - The original scroll event
      • offset: number - Either the value of wrapper.scrollTop or wrapper.scrollLeft
  • itemsUpdated - Fired when the visible items are updated
    • detail Props:
      • start: number - Index of the first visible item
      • end: number - Index of the last visible item

Methods

  • recomputeSizes(startIndex: number) - This method force recomputes the item sizes after the specified index (these are normally cached).

VirtualTable has no way of knowing when its underlying data has changed, since it only receives a itemSize property. If the itemSize is a number, this isn't an issue, as it can compare before and after values and automatically call recomputeSizes internally. However, if you're passing a function to itemSize, that type of comparison is error prone. In that event, you'll need to call recomputeSizes manually to inform the VirtualTable that the size of its items has changed.

Use the methods like this:

<script>
	import { onMount } from 'svelte';
	import VirtualTable from 'svelte-tiny-virtual-table';

	const data = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' /* ... */];

	let VirtualTable;

	function handleClick() {
		VirtualTable.recomputeSizes(0);
	}
</script>

<button on:click={handleClick}>Recompute Sizes</button>

<VirtualTable
	bind:this={VirtualTable}
	width="100%"
	height={600}
	itemCount={data.length}
	itemSize={50}
>
	<div slot="item" let:index let:style {style}>
		Letter: {data[index]}, Row: #{index}
	</div>
</VirtualTable>

Styling

You can style the elements of the virtual list like this:

<script>
	import VirtualTable from 'svelte-tiny-virtual-table';

	const data = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' /* ... */];
</script>

<div class="list">
	<VirtualTable width="100%" height={600} itemCount={data.length} itemSize={50}>
		<div slot="item" let:index let:style {style}>
			Letter: {data[index]}, Row: #{index}
		</div>
	</VirtualTable>
</div>

<style>
	.list :global(.virtual-table-wrapper) {
		background-color: #0f0;
		/* ... */
	}

	.list :global(.virtual-table-inner) {
		background-color: #f00;
		/* ... */
	}
</style>

Examples / Demo

License

MIT License