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Getting Started |
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Hooks for building lightweight, fast and extendable datagrids for React
Enjoy this library? Try them all! React Query, React Form, React Charts
- Lightweight (5kb - 14kb+ depending on features used and tree-shaking)
- Headless (100% customizable, Bring-your-own-UI)
- Auto out of the box, fully controllable API
- Sorting (Multi and Stable)
- Filters
- Pivoting & Aggregation
- Row Selection
- Row Expansion
- Column Ordering
- Animatable
- Virtualizable
- Resizable
- Server-side/controlled data/state
- Extensible via hook-based plugin system
The examples below are built by our partners from Creative Tim and demonstrate how React Table can be integrated in real world applications. There are many examples that you can play with and each premium product comes with a free & open source version, too!
Material Dashboard PRO React
Premium: $59 - Lite: Free
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Black Dashboard PRO React
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Now UI Dashboard PRO React
Premium: $59 - Lite: Free
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This library is being built and maintained by me, @tannerlinsley and I am always in need of more support to keep this project afloat. If you would like to get additional support, add your logo or name on this README, or simply just contribute to my open source Sponsorship goal, visit my Github Sponsors page!
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Become a Supporter! |
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Become a Fan! |
Visit our new documentation site at https://react-table.js.org
v6 is a great library and while it is still available to install and use, I am no longer offering any long-term support for it. If you intend to keep using v6, I recommend maintaining your own fork of the library and keeping it up to date for your version of React.
Please visit the v6 branch
The differences between the 2 versions are incredibly massive. Unfortunately, I cannot write a one-to-one upgrade guide for any of v6's API, simply because much of it is irrelevant with v7's headless approach. The best approach for migrating to v7 is to learn its API by reading the documentation and then following some of the examples to begin building your own table component.
In case you would need to have both v6 and v7 in one app during the migration process (large codebase, complex use cases), you can either (1) fork and maintain your own local version of React Table v6 or (2) install the react-table-6
alias package for use alongside the react-table
package.