Notes

  • In v2.11, the filter functions provide an additional parameter $r providing a jQuery object of the current row being searched by the filter.
  • For v2.10.8, the Age column includes the new data-value set to <30 which sets the default (starting) filter value (see filter_defaultAttrib for more details).
  • As of tablesorter v2.9, this widget can no longer be applied to versions of tablesorter prior to version 2.8.
  • Custom filter widget option filter_functions was added in version 2.3.6.
  • jQuery v1.4.3+ required.

Default Select ("First Name" column)

  • To enable this type of select, set the filter_functions option for the column to true,
    filter_functions : {
    
      // Add select menu to this column
      // set the column value to true, and/or add "filter-select" class name to header
      0 : true
    
    }
    or add a "filter-select" class to the column header cell (see code below).
  • The default option text, "Select a name", is obtained from the header data-placeholder attribute of the column header cell. And when active, it will show all table rows.
    <th class="filter-select" data-placeholder="Select a name">First Name</th>
  • Add a "filter-match" class to only match instead of exactly match the selected value. Click on the "Match" button below to see the difference.
    <th class="filter-select filter-match" data-placeholder="Select a name">First Name</th>
  • The select is populated by the column text contents with repeated content combined (i.e. There are three "Aaron"'s in the first column, but only one in the dropdown.
  • Select options are automatically alphanumerically (new in v2.4) sorted.
  • Please check out what the "filter-onlyAvail" class name does by reviewing the details below (in the "Discount" column) (v2.10.1).

Custom Filter Function ("Last Name" column)

  • To enable this type of filter, add your custom function to the filter_functions option following this example:
    filter_functions : {
    
      // Exact match only
      1 : function(e, n, f, i, $r) {
        return e === f;
      }
    
    }
  • The example shows you how to show only exact matches. The problem with this is that you can't see the matches while typing unless you set the filter_searchDelay option to be a bit longer.
  • Also, the example only checks for an exact match (===) meaning the filter_ignoreCase option is ignored, but other comparisons can be made using regex and the insensitive "i" flag.
  • See the filter function information below.

Custom Select ("City" or "Total" column)

  • To enable this type of select, add your custom options within the filter_functions option.
  • Each option is set as a "key:value" pair where the "key" is the actual text of the option and the "value" is the function associated with the option.
  • Here is an example using alphabetical comparisons (using regular expressions):
    filter_functions : {
    
      // Add these options to the select dropdown (regex example)
      2 : {
        "A - D" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[A-D]/.test(e); },
        "E - H" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[E-H]/.test(e); },
        "I - L" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[I-L]/.test(e); },
        "M - P" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[M-P]/.test(e); },
        "Q - T" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[Q-T]/.test(e); },
        "U - X" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[U-X]/.test(e); },
        "Y - Z" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return /^[Y-Z]/.test(e); }
      }
    
    }
  • Here is an example using numerical comparisons:
    filter_functions : {
      // Add these options to the select dropdown (numerical comparison example)
      // Note that only the normalized (n) value will contain numerical data
      // If you use the exact text, you'll need to parse it (parseFloat or parseInt)
      4 : {
        "< $10"      : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return n < 10; },
        "$10 - $100" : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return n >= 10 && n <=100; },
        "> $100"     : function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return n > 100; }
      }
    }
  • See the "Filter function information" section below.

Default Select showing only available options ("Discount" column)

  • This column uses the same method as the "First Name" column with one exception, it also includes the "filter-onlyAvail" class name in the header cell:
    <th class="filter-select filter-onlyAvail">Discount</th>
  • To see how this works, do the following:
    • First, filter the "First Name" column by selecting the name "Clark"
    • Now use the "Discount" filter select box, you'll notice that only the values associated with the first name of Clark are showing as options.
  • Conversely, if you reset the filters, select "44%" in the "Discount" column, then look at the "First Name" filter selector, you'll notice that it still contains all of the original options; because the "filter-onlyAvail" class name is not included in that column's header cell.
  • Sorry, this functionality only works for default select filters.
  • This funcitonality was added in v2.10.1.

Filter function information

  • The custom function must return a boolean value. If true is returned, the row will be shown if all other filters match; and if false is returned, the row will be hidden.
    function(e, n, f, i, $r) { return test; /* test should be a Boolean (true or false) */ }
  • The exact text (e) of the table cell is a variable passed to the function. Note that numbers will need to be parsed to make comparisons.
  • Normalized table cell data (n) is the next varibale passed to the function.
    • This data has been parsed by the assigned column parser, so make sure the same type of data is being compared as parsed data may not be what you expect.
    • Normalized numerical values within the table will be of numeric type and not of string type, as the sorter needs to use mathematical comparisons while sorting.
    • The data will be in lower-case if the filter_ignoreCase option is true.
    • Dates like in the last column of the table below will store the time in seconds since 1970 (using javascript's .getTime() function).
    • The percentage column will only store the number and not percentage sign.
  • The filter input value (f) is the exact text entered by the user. If numerical, it will need to be parsed using parseFloat() or parseInt() to allow for making comparisons.
  • The column index (i) might be useful for obtaining more information from header, or something.
  • The row ($r) is the current table row (jQuery object) being searched (or filtered); this allows access to any extra information within. To access the current cell, just use $r.children().eq(i).

Demo

false (toggle "filter-match" class on First Name column)
First Name Last Name City Age Total Discount Date
Aaron Johnson Sr Atlanta 35 $5.95 22% Jun 26, 2004 7:22 AM
Aaron Johnson Yuma 12 $2.99 5% Aug 21, 2009 12:21 PM
Clark Henry Jr Tampa 51 $42.29 18% Oct 13, 2000 1:15 PM
Denni Henry New York 28 $9.99 20% Jul 6, 2006 8:14 AM
John Hood Boston 33 $19.99 25% Dec 10, 2002 5:14 AM
Clark Kent Sr Los Angeles 18 $15.89 44% Jan 12, 2003 11:14 AM
Peter Kent Esq Seattle 45 $153.19 44% Jan 18, 2021 9:12 AM
Peter Johns Milwaukee 13 $5.29 4% Jan 8, 2012 5:11 PM
Aaron Evan Chicago 24 $14.19 14% Jan 14, 2004 11:23 AM
Bruce Evans Upland 22 $13.19 11% Jan 18, 2007 9:12 AM
Clark McMasters Pheonix 18 $55.20 15% Feb 12, 2010 7:23 PM
Dennis Masters Indianapolis 65 $123.00 32% Jan 20, 2001 1:12 PM
John Hood Fort Worth 25 $22.09 17% Jun 11, 2011 10:55 AM

Javascript


	

HTML


	

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