Just revisiting an old solution, I thought I’d give it a facelift for it’s ~5 year anniversary!
- Plain Javascript (ES6)
- Does alpha and numeric sorting – ascending and descending
- Works in Chrome, Firefox, Safari (and IE11, see below)
Quick explanation
- add a
click
event to all header (th
) cells… - for the current
table
, find all rows (except the first)… - sort the rows, based on the value of the clicked column…
- insert the rows back into the table, in the new order.
const getCellValue = (tr, idx) => tr.children[idx].innerText || tr.children[idx].textContent; const comparer = (idx, asc) => (a, b) => ((v1, v2) => v1 !== '' && v2 !== '' && !isNaN(v1) && !isNaN(v2) ? v1 - v2 : v1.toString().localeCompare(v2) )(getCellValue(asc ? a : b, idx), getCellValue(asc ? b : a, idx)); // do the work... document.querySelectorAll('th').forEach(th => th.addEventListener('click', (() => { const table = th.closest('table'); Array.from(table.querySelectorAll('tr:nth-child(n+2)')) .sort(comparer(Array.from(th.parentNode.children).indexOf(th), this.asc = !this.asc)) .forEach(tr => table.appendChild(tr) ); })));
table, th, td { border: 1px solid black; } th { cursor: pointer; }
<table> <tr><th>Country</th><th>Date</th><th>Size</th></tr> <tr><td>France</td><td>2001-01-01</td><td><i>25</i></td></tr> <tr><td><a href=#>spain</a></td><td><i>2005-05-05</i></td><td></td></tr> <tr><td><b>Lebanon</b></td><td><a href=#>2002-02-02</a></td><td><b>-17</b></td></tr> <tr><td><i>Argentina</i></td><td>2005-04-04</td><td><a href=#>100</a></td></tr> <tr><td>USA</td><td></td><td>-6</td></tr> </table>
Run code snippetExpand snippet
IE11 Support (non-ES6)
If you want to support IE11, you’ll need to ditch the ES6 syntax and use alternatives to Array.from
and Element.closest
.
i.e.
var getCellValue = function(tr, idx){ return tr.children[idx].innerText || tr.children[idx].textContent; } var comparer = function(idx, asc) { return function(a, b) { return function(v1, v2) { return v1 !== '' && v2 !== '' && !isNaN(v1) && !isNaN(v2) ? v1 - v2 : v1.toString().localeCompare(v2); }(getCellValue(asc ? a : b, idx), getCellValue(asc ? b : a, idx)); }}; // do the work... Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('th')).forEach(function(th) { th.addEventListener('click', function() { var table = th.parentNode while(table.tagName.toUpperCase() != 'TABLE') table = table.parentNode; Array.prototype.slice.call(table.querySelectorAll('tr:nth-child(n+2)')) .sort(comparer(Array.prototype.slice.call(th.parentNode.children).indexOf(th), this.asc = !this.asc)) .forEach(function(tr) { table.appendChild(tr) }); }) });
Comparer function breakdown
For the sake of brevity, I compacted the comparer()
function. It’s a little complex/hard to read, so here it is again exploded/formatted/commented.
// Returns a function responsible for sorting a specific column index // (idx = columnIndex, asc = ascending order?). var comparer = function(idx, asc) { // This is used by the array.sort() function... return function(a, b) { // This is a transient function, that is called straight away. // It allows passing in different order of args, based on // the ascending/descending order. return function(v1, v2) { // sort based on a numeric or localeCompare, based on type... return (v1 !== '' && v2 !== '' && !isNaN(v1) && !isNaN(v2)) ? v1 - v2 : v1.toString().localeCompare(v2); }(getCellValue(asc ? a : b, idx), getCellValue(asc ? b : a, idx)); } };