Gathering detailed insights and metrics for jspdf-autotable-extra
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for jspdf-autotable-extra
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for jspdf-autotable-extra
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for jspdf-autotable-extra
jsPDF plugin for generating PDF tables with javascript
npm install jspdf-autotable-extra
Typescript
Module System
Node Version
NPM Version
55
Supply Chain
97
Quality
81.5
Maintenance
100
Vulnerability
99.3
License
TypeScript (89.63%)
HTML (8.07%)
JavaScript (2.3%)
Total Downloads
1,039
Last Day
1
Last Week
2
Last Month
6
Last Year
1,039
1,132 Commits
3 Branches
1 Contributors
Latest Version
3.8.12
Package Id
jspdf-autotable-extra@3.8.12
Unpacked Size
233.21 kB
Size
55.21 kB
File Count
7
NPM Version
10.2.3
Node Version
18.19.0
Publised On
15 Feb 2024
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
0%
1
Compared to previous day
Last week
100%
2
Compared to previous week
Last month
-25%
6
Compared to previous month
Last year
0%
1,039
Compared to previous year
1
22
Generate PDF tables with Javascript
fork from jspdf-autotable This jsPDF plugin adds the ability to generate PDF tables either by parsing HTML tables or by using Javascript data directly. Check out the demo or examples.
Get jsPDF and this plugin by doing one of these things:
npm install jspdf jspdf-autotable
1import { jsPDF } from 'jspdf' 2import { autoTable } from 'jspdf-autotable' 3 4const doc = new jsPDF() 5 6// It can parse html: 7// <table id="my-table"><!-- ... --></table> 8autoTable(doc, { html: '#my-table' }) 9 10// Or use javascript directly: 11autoTable(doc, { 12 head: [['Name', 'Email', 'Country']], 13 body: [ 14 ['David', 'david@example.com', 'Sweden'], 15 ['Castille', 'castille@example.com', 'Spain'], 16 // ... 17 ], 18}) 19 20doc.save('table.pdf')
You can also use the plugin methods directly on the jsPDF documents:
1import jsPDF from 'jspdf' 2import 'jspdf-autotable' 3 4const doc = new jsPDF() 5doc.autoTable({ html: '#my-table' }) 6doc.save('table.pdf')
The third usage option is with downloaded or CDN dist files
1<script src="jspdf.min.js"></script> 2<script src="jspdf.plugin.autotable.min.js"></script> 3<script> 4 const doc = new jsPDF() 5 const { autoTable } = window['jspdf-autotable'] 6 autoTable(doc, { html: '#my-table' }) 7 doc.save('table.pdf') 8</script>
Checkout more examples in examples.js which is also the source code for the demo documents.
autoTable(doc, {...})
usage style is now supported and doc.autoTable({...})
has been removed (see usage section above. Read more: #997)Below is a list of all options supported in the plugin. All of them are used in the examples.
The only thing required is either the html or body option. If you want more control over the columns you can specify the columns property. If columns are not set they will be automatically computed based on the content of the html content or head, body and foot.
html: string|HTMLTableElement
A css selector (for example "#table") or an html table element.head: CellDef[][]
For example [['ID', 'Name', 'Country']]body: CellDef[][]
For example [['1', 'Simon', 'Sweden'], ['2', 'Karl', 'Norway']]foot: CellDef[][]
For example [['ID', 'Name', 'Country']]columns: ColumnDef[]
For example [{header: 'ID', dataKey: 'id'}, {header: 'Name', dataKey: 'name'}]. Only use this option if you want more control over the columns. If not specified the columns will be automatically generated based on the content in html or head/body/footincludeHiddenHtml: boolean = false
If hidden html with display: none
should be included or not when the content comes from an html tableCellDef: string|{content: string, rowSpan: number, colSpan: number, styles: StyleDef}
Note that cell styles can also be set dynamically with hooks.
ColumnDef: string|{header?: string, dataKey: string}
The header property is optional and the values of any content in head
will be used if not set. Normally it's easier to use the html or head/body/foot style of initiating a table, but columns can be useful if your body content comes directly from an api or if you would like to specify a dataKey on each column to make it more readable to style specific columns in the hooks or columnStyles.
Usage with colspan, rowspan and inline cell styles:
1autoTable(doc, { 2 body: [ 3 [{ content: 'Text', colSpan: 2, rowSpan: 2, styles: { halign: 'center' } }], 4 ], 5})
theme: 'striped'|'grid'|'plain' = 'striped'
styles: StyleDef
headStyles: StyleDef
bodyStyles: StyleDef
footStyles: StyleDef
alternateRowStyles: StyleDef
columnStyles: {&columnDataKey: StyleDef}
Note that the columnDataKey is normally the index of the column, but could also be the dataKey
of a column if content initialized with the columns propertyStyleDef
:
font: 'helvetica'|'times'|'courier' = 'helvetica'
fontStyle: 'normal'|'bold'|'italic'|'bolditalic' = 'normal'
overflow: 'linebreak'|'ellipsize'|'visible'|'hidden' = 'linebreak'
fillColor: Color? = null
textColor: Color? = 20
cellWidth: 'auto'|'wrap'|number = 'auto'
minCellWidth: number? = 10
minCellHeight: number = 0
halign: 'left'|'center'|'right' = 'left'
valign: 'top'|'middle'|'bottom' = 'top'
fontSize: number = 10
cellPadding: Padding = 10
lineColor: Color = 10
lineWidth: border = 0
// If 0, no border is drawnColor
:
Either false for transparent, hex string, gray level 0-255 or rbg array e.g. [255, 0, 0]
false|string|number|[number, number, number]
Padding
:
Either a number or object {top: number, right: number, bottom: number, left: number}
border
:
Either a number or object {top: number, right: number, bottom: number, left: number}
Styles work similar to css and can be overridden by more specific styles. Overriding order:
styles
headStyles
, bodyStyles
and footStyles
alternateRowStyles
columnStyles
Styles for specific cells can also be applied using either the hooks (see hooks section above) or the styles
property on the cell definition object (see content section above).
Example usage of column styles (note that the 0 in the columnStyles below should be dataKey if columns option used)
1// Example usage with columnStyles, 2autoTable(doc, { 3 styles: { fillColor: [255, 0, 0] }, 4 columnStyles: { 0: { halign: 'center', fillColor: [0, 255, 0] } }, // Cells in first column centered and green 5 margin: { top: 10 }, 6 body: [ 7 ['Sweden', 'Japan', 'Canada'], 8 ['Norway', 'China', 'USA'], 9 ['Denmark', 'China', 'Mexico'], 10 ], 11}) 12 13// Example usage of columns property. Note that America will not be included even though it exist in the body since there is no column specified for it. 14autoTable(doc, { 15 columnStyles: { europe: { halign: 'center' } }, // European countries centered 16 body: [ 17 { europe: 'Sweden', america: 'Canada', asia: 'China' }, 18 { europe: 'Norway', america: 'Mexico', asia: 'Japan' }, 19 ], 20 columns: [ 21 { header: 'Europe', dataKey: 'europe' }, 22 { header: 'Asia', dataKey: 'asia' }, 23 ], 24})
useCss: boolean = false
startY: number = null
Where the table should start to be printed (basically a margin top value only for the first page)margin: Margin = 40
pageBreak: 'auto'|'avoid'|'always'
If set to avoid
the plugin will only split a table onto multiple pages if table height is larger than page height.rowPageBreak: 'auto'|'avoid' = 'auto'
If set to avoid
the plugin will only split a row onto multiple pages if row height is larger than page height.tableWidth: 'auto'|'wrap'|number = 'auto'
showHead: 'everyPage'|'firstPage'|'never' = 'everyPage''
showFoot: 'everyPage'|'lastPage'|'never' = 'everyPage''
tableLineWidth: number = 0
tableLineColor: Color = 200
The table line/border colorhorizontalPageBreak: boolean = false
To split/break the table into multiple pages if the given table width exceeds the page widthhorizontalPageBreakRepeat: string|number|string[]|number[]
To repeat the given column in the split pages, works when horizontalPageBreak = true
. The accepted values are column dataKeys, such as 'id'
, recordId
or column indexes, such as 0
, 1
or array for multiple columns.horizontalPageBreakBehaviour: 'immediately'|'afterAllRows' = 'afterAllRows'
How the horizontal page breaks behave, works when horizontalPageBreak = true
Margin
:
Either a number or object {top: number, right: number, bottom: number, left: number}
You can customize the content and styling of the table by using the hooks. See the custom styles example for usage of the hooks.
didParseCell: (HookData) => {}
- Called when the plugin finished parsing cell content. Can be used to override content or styles for a specific cell.willDrawCell: (HookData) => {}
- Called before a cell or row is drawn. Can be used to call native jspdf styling functions such as doc.setTextColor
or change position of text etc before it is drawn.didDrawCell: (HookData) => {}
- Called after a cell has been added to the page. Can be used to draw additional cell content such as images with doc.addImage
, additional text with doc.addText
or other jspdf shapes.willDrawPage: (HookData) => {}
- Called before starting to draw on a page. Can be used to add headers or any other content that you want on each page there is an autotable.didDrawPage: (HookData) => {}
- Called after the plugin has finished drawing everything on a page. Can be used to add footers with page numbers or any other content that you want on each page there is an autotable.All hooks functions get passed an HookData object with information about the state of the table and cell. For example the position on the page, which page it is on etc.
HookData
:
table: Table
pageNumber: number
The page number specific to this tablesettings: object
Parsed user supplied optionsdoc
The jsPDF document instance of this tablecursor: { x: number, y: number }
To draw each table this plugin keeps a cursor state where the next cell/row should be drawn. You can assign new values to this cursor to dynamically change how the cells and rows are drawn.For cell hooks these properties are also passed:
cell: Cell
row: Row
column: Column
section: 'head'|'body'|'foot'
To see what is included in the Table
, Row
, Column
and Cell
types, either log them to the console or take a look at src/models.ts
1// Example with an image drawn in each cell in the first column
2autoTable(doc, {
3 didDrawCell: (data) => {
4 if (data.section === 'body' && data.column.index === 0) {
5 var base64Img = 'data:image/jpeg;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANS...'
6 doc.addImage(base64Img, 'JPEG', data.cell.x + 2, data.cell.y + 2, 10, 10)
7 }
8 },
9})
doc.autoTable({ /* options */ })
autoTable(doc, { /* options */ })
If you want to know something about the last table that was drawn you can use doc.lastAutoTable
. It has a doc.lastAutoTable.finalY
property among other things that has the value of the last printed y coordinate on a page. This can be used to draw text, multiple tables or other content after a table.
In addition to the exported autoTable(doc, options) method you can also use applyPlugin to add the autoTable api to any jsPDF instance.
import jsPDF from 'jspdf/dist/jspdf.node.debug'
import { applyPlugin } from 'jspdf-autotable'
applyPlugin(jsPDF)
Contributions are always welcome, especially on open issues. If you have something major you want to add or change, please post an issue about it first to discuss it further. The workflow for contributing would be something like this:
npm start
If you don't use Prettier on autosave, please run yarn run format-all
before opening your PR
npm version <semver>
and npm run deploy)PR=472 npm run checkout-pr
npm version prerelease
git push && git push --tags && npm publish --tag alpha
No vulnerabilities found.
No security vulnerabilities found.