Skip to content

ig16022/ng2-pagination

 
 

Repository files navigation

Angular2 Pagination Build Status

This is a port of my angular-utils-pagination module from Angular 1.x to Angular 2. Due to fundamental differences in the design of Angular2, the API is different but the idea is the same - the most simple possible way to add full-featured pagination to an Angular app.

Demo

Check out the live demo here: http://michaelbromley.github.io/ng2-pagination/

Play with it on Plunker here: http://plnkr.co/edit/JVQMPvV8z2brCIzdG3N4?p=preview

Quick Start

npm install ng2-pagination --save

Angular 2 Version

This library is built to work with Angular 2.0.0+, and support ahead-of-time compilation. If you need to support a previous version of Angular 2 for now, please see the changelog for advice on which version to use.

CommonJS

ng2-pagination ships as un-bundled CommonJS modules (located in the dist folder), which can be imported with require('ng2-pagination');, or import for those environments that support this method (e.g. TypeScript 1.6+).

System.register

ng2-pagination also ships with a bundle in the system format (dist/ng2-pagination-bundle.js), suitable for use with the es6-module-loader and related loaders such as SystemJS.

Simple Example

// app.module.ts
import {NgModule} from '@angular/core';
import {BrowserModule} from '@angular/platform-browser';
import {Ng2PaginationModule} from 'ng2-pagination'; // <-- import the module
import {MyComponent} from './my.component';

@NgModule({
    imports: [BrowserModule, Ng2PaginationModule], // <-- include it in your app module
    declarations: [MyComponent],
    bootstrap: [MyComponent]
})
export class MyAppModule {}
// my.component.ts
import {Component} from '@angular/core';

@Component({
    selector: 'my-component',
    template: `
    <ul>
      <li *ngFor="let item of collection | paginate: { itemsPerPage: 10, currentPage: p }"> ... </li>
    </ul>
               
    <pagination-controls (pageChange)="p = $event"></pagination-controls>
    `
})
export class MyComponent {
    public collection: any[] = someArrayOfThings;  
}

API

PaginatePipe

The PaginatePipe should be placed at the end of an NgFor expression. It accepts a single argument, an object conforming to the PaginationInstance interface. The following config options are available:

<element *ngFor="let item of collection | paginate: { id: 'foo',
                                                      itemsPerPage: pageSize,
                                                      currentPage: p,
                                                      totalItems: total }">...</element>
  • itemsPerPage [number] - required The number of items to display on each page.
  • currentPage [number] - required The current (active) page number.
  • id [string] If you need to support more than one instance of pagination at a time, set the id and ensure it matches the id attribute of the PaginationControlsComponent / PaginationControlsDirective (see below).
  • totalItems [number] The total number of items in the collection. Only useful when doing server-side paging, where the collection size is limited to a single page returned by the server API. For in-memory paging, this property should not be set, as it will be automatically set to the value of collection.length.

PaginationControlsComponent

This a default component for displaying pagination controls. It is implemented on top of the PaginationControlsDirective, and has a pre-set template and styles based on the Foundation 6 pagination component. If you require a more customised set of controls, you will need to use the PaginationControlsDirective and implement your own component.

<pagination-controls  id="some_id"
                      (pageChange)="pageChanged($event)"
                      maxSize="9"
                      directionLinks="true"
                      autoHide="true">
</pagination-controls>
  • id [string] If you need to support more than one instance of pagination at a time, set the id and ensure it matches the id set in the PaginatePipe config.
  • pageChange [event handler] The expression specified will be invoked whenever the page changes via a click on one of the pagination controls. The $event argument will be the number of the new page. This should be used to update the value of the currentPage variable which was passed to the PaginatePipe.
  • maxSize [number] Defines the maximum number of page links to display. Default is 7.
  • directionLinks [boolean] If set to false, the "previous" and "next" links will not be displayed. Default is true.
  • autoHide [boolean] If set to true, the pagination controls will not be displayed when all items in the collection fit onto the first page. Default is false.

PaginationControlsDirective

The PaginationControlsDirective is used to build components for controlling your pagination instances. The directive selector is pagination-template, either as an element or an attribute. It exports an API named "paginationApi", which can then be used to build the controls component.

It has the following inputs and outputs:

@Input() id: string;
@Input() maxSize: number;
@Output() pageChange: EventEmitter<number>;

Here is an example of how it would be used to build a custom component:

<pagination-template #p="paginationApi"
                     (pageChange)="pageChange.emit($event)">

        <div class="pagination-previous" [class.disabled]="p.isFirstPage()">
            <a *ngIf="!p.isFirstPage()" (click)="p.previous()"> < </a>
        </div>

        <div *ngFor="let page of p.pages" [class.current]="p.getCurrent() === page.value">
            <a (click)="p.setCurrent(page.value)" *ngIf="p.getCurrent() !== page.value">
                <span>{{ page.label }}</span>
            </a>
            <div *ngIf="p.getCurrent() === page.value">
                <span>{{ page.label }}</span>
            </div>
        </div>

        <div class="pagination-next" [class.disabled]="p.isLastPage()">
            <a *ngIf="!p.isLastPage()" (click)="p.next()"> > </a>
        </div>
    
</pagination-template>

The key thing to note here is #p="paginationApi" - this provides a local variable, p (name it however you like), which can be used in the template to access the directive's API methods and properties, which are explained below:

  • pages [{ label: string, value: any }[]] Array of page objects containing the page number and label.
  • maxSize [number] Corresponds to the value of maxSize which is passed to the directive.
  • getCurrent() [() => number] Returns the current page number.
  • setCurrent(val) [(val: number) => void] Triggers the pageChange event with the page number passed as val.
  • previous() [() => void] Sets current page to previous, triggering the pageChange event.
  • next() [() => void] Sets current page to next, triggering the pageChange event.
  • isFirstPage() [() => boolean] Returns true if the current page is the first page.
  • isLastPage() [() => boolean] Returns true if the current page is the last page
  • getLastPage() [() => number] Returns the page number of the last page.

For a real-world implementation of a custom component, take a look at the source for the PaginationControlsComponent.

Server-Side Paging

In many cases - for example when working with very large data-sets - we do not want to work with the full collection in memory, and use some kind of server-side paging, where the server sends just a single page at a time.

This scenario is supported by ng2-pagination by using the totalItems config option.

Given a server response json object like this:

{
  "count": 14453,
  "data": [
    { /* item 1 */ },
    { /* item 2 */ },
    { /* item 3 */ },
    { /*   ...  */ },
    { /* item 10 */ }
  ]
}

we should pass the value of count to the PaginatePipe as the totalItems argument:

<li *ngFor="let item of collection | paginate: { itemsPerPage: 10, currentPage: p, totalItems: res.count }">...</li>

This will allow the correct number of page links to be calculated. To see a complete example of this (including using the async pipe), see the demo.

Build

Requires globally-installed node (tested with v5.x) & npm.

npm install
npm run typings:install

npm run test // Karma unit tests
npm run demo:watch // Build the demo app and watch

License

MIT

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 86.9%
  • JavaScript 13.1%