Float the table header without special css. This plugin assumes nothing about your table markup and "just works" without losing your events or styles. Supports floating the header while scrolling within the window or while scrolling within a container with overflow.
Check out the demo / docs page for copious examples:
Jekyll templates to generate the docs are in the gh-pages branch
See: mkoryak#30
Inside of that zip the following javascript files are of interest to you:
/dist/jquery.floatThead.js
= development version/dist/jquery.floatThead.min.js
= production version
if your project includes underscore and you want to save a few bytes you can use the slim version:
/dist/jquery.floatThead-slim.js
/dist/jquery.floatThead-slim.min.js
http://cdnjs.com/libraries/floatthead/
Install using Bower:
bower install floatThead
npm install floatthead
- Floats the table header - so that the user can always see it
- Supports tables with inner scroll bars, or whole page scrolling
- Horizontal or vertical scrolling
- Doesn't clone the thead - so your events stay bound
- Doesn't mess with your styles
- Works on any table
- Requires no special css
- Works with datatables out of the box
- jQuery 1.8.x or better (1.9 compliant) (or jQuery 1.7.x and jQuery UI core)
- IE8 or better
- Modern browsers
FloatThead will not work properly in IE9 unless you have the following meta tag in the head of the page:
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=11; IE=10; IE=9; IE=8; IE=7; IE=EDGE" />
With very big tables, you may also run into this exciting bug: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5805956/internet-explorer-9-not-rendering-table-cells-properly
Watch for it.
- Deprecated the
cellTag
option, useheaderCellSelector
instead (see docs) - mkoryak#101 - huge performance improvement
- mkoryak#98 - Border-collapse ignored on scroll
- mkoryak#99 - Incorrect scroll width calculation in some cases
- A couple of updates to the
destroy
method that get the table back into a more pristine state
- mkoryak#82 - table not disappearing when out of view in a certain layout
- mkoryak#84 - header not aligned if your scrolling container has a certain height
- mkoryak#86 - do not take hidden TRs into account when calculating header height
- Changed license over to MIT
- new stuff:
- added support for tables with existing
<colgroup>
elements - added a grunt task to build dist to master
- bug fixes:
- mkoryak#57 - window resize issues on windows
- mkoryak#70 - better support for responsive tables
- mkoryak#71 - incorrectly unbinding events in destroy
- mkoryak#75 - dom leakage in destroy
- bug fixes:
- mkoryak#66
- mkoryak#65
- mkoryak#62
- better support for really really wide tables
- fixed mkoryak#53
- fixed mkoryak#56
- removed underscore dependency, added a slim version which is very slightly smaller and requires underscore
- now supporting a few evil deprecated table attributes that people still use:
cellpadding
andcellspacing
- fixed mkoryak#52
- fixed mkoryak#50
- added floatWrapperClass option
- added copyTableClass option
- better support for tables with dynamically hidden columns
- can now set a class on the floating header's container div
- fixed issue with caption tag align:bottom
- switched to uglifyjs to minify code
caption
tag support- faster initialization when working with large tables (and small ones)
- Fixed bugs introduced in 1.0.0 which caused issues in IE9
- Updated code to be jquery 1.9+ compliant
Your site? email me: my last name at gmail
There are plenty of other fixed header / floating header / scrolling table header plugins that attempt to do the same thing this plugin does. None of them support both window and overflow scrolling and many of them depend on special css or require that you set the table column widths. Some of them are good and some of them suck. Go ahead and check them out too.
I have compiled a list here with comments on each one:
| Plugin | Window Scrolling | Overflow-X Scrolling | Overflow-Y Scrolling | No Special CSS | Keeps Bound Events | Freeze Columns | |:-------------:|:-------------:|:-----:|:-------------:|:-------------:|:-----:|:-----:|:-----:| | FloatThead | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | no | | Fixed-Table-Header | no | yes | no | yes | no | no | | jquery.scrollTableBody | no | yes | yes | no | ?? | no | | Fixed table rows cols | no | yes | yes | no | ?? | yes | | Table Fixed Header | yes | no | no | yes | no | no | | Sticky Table Header | yes | no | no | yes | yes | no | | Grid | no | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
Fixed-Table-Header This is the original. It has been around for ages and it will be the first plugin you find when you start looking. It also has a ton of open unresolved issues. It does not support window scrolling, it does not seem to support y-scrolling withing the container. It loses the events you attached to the thead. Lots of open issues. Stay away.
Fixed table rows cols Does not support window scrolling. Requires you to specify the column widths for the table. This means that the table will not be able to optimally lay itself out. It does support freezing columns in place. If you need that, this might be the plugin for you.
jquery.scrollTableBody Does not support window scrolling. A newcomer to the scene, not a mature project. Has some major issues with cell padding. Stay away until issues are resolved.
Grid This lib is very different from the rest because its main usecase is to give you a sortable grid. You do not run this plugin on an existing table - you need to provide a json or xml data source. This is a great lightweight replacement for datatables. This may be the plugin for you if you are not converting an existing table.
Table Fixed Header This is a window scrolling plugin, does not support overflow scrolling. Does not work properly when the window is resized and the table width changes. Floated header sticks around if you scroll past table. Author welcomes pull requests but does not fix issues. Stay away
Sticky Table Header This is a window scrolling plugin. Does not support overflow scrolling. It is probably the best window scrolling plugin (besides this one). The author seems to fix issues as they arise.
MIT