So what's it good for? Well, let's say you want to display a long list of fairly uniform tabluar data, like stock exchange listings or sport statistics but you don't want your users to get lost in the data as they scroll down on the page.
StickyTableHeaders to the rescue: By applying the StickyTableHeaders jQuery plugin to the table, the column headers will stick to the top of the viewport as you scroll down.
Go ahead and try out a demo.
The code is based on this proof of concept.
The best way to install is using npm:
npm install sticky-table-headers
or Bower:
bower install StickyTableHeaders
or by loading it directly from the unpkg CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/sticky-table-headers"></script>
Initializing the plugin is pretty straight forward:
$('table').stickyTableHeaders();
To remove the plugin:
$('table').stickyTableHeaders('destroy');
$(window).trigger('resize.stickyTableHeaders');
You can initialize the plugin with an options map to tweak the behavior. The following options are supported:
A number or jQuery object specifying how much the sticky header should be offset from the top of the page:
$('table').stickyTableHeaders({fixedOffset: $('#header')});
A DOM element or jQuery object. Allows you to overwrite which surrounding element is scrolling. Defaults to window
. Check this demo for an example:
$('table').stickyTableHeaders({scrollableArea: $('.scrollable-area')});
Performance tweak: When set to true
the plugin will only recalculate the height of the header cells when the width of the table changes.
Default value: false
$('table').stickyTableHeaders({cacheHeaderHeight: true});
As described in pull request #33 responsive pages might need to reinitialize the plugin when the user resizes his browser. This is can be done by calling the plugin with the new options:
$('table').stickyTableHeaders({fixedOffset: [new-offset]});
The plugin triggers the following events on the targeted <table>
element:
clonedHeader.stickyTableHeaders
: When the header clone is created.enabledStickiness.stickyTableHeaders
: When the sticky header is enabled.disabledStickiness.stickyTableHeaders
: When the sticky header is disabled.
If any of this is confusing, please check out the /demo folder. There are a couple of examples in there. E.g. you can see how to use it with Twitter Bootstrap.
- Internet Explorer: You need to set the padding of the
<th>
s explicitly in the css in order to make the plugin work - Internet Explorer: Adding horizontal margin to the table causes the header to be misaligned when scrolling. (Issue #10)
- Using the plugin together with tablesorter breaks in Internet Explorer 8
The plugin has been verified to work in:
- Chrome 35
- Firefox 29
- Internet Explorer 8-11
- Safari 5
NOTE: It does not work in Internet Explorer 7 (but it degrades nicely)