Angular Pivot Grid Column Hiding

    The Ignite UI for Angular Pivot Grid provides an IgxColumnActionsComponent with an IgxColumnHidingDirective which allows users to perform column hiding directly through the user interface or by using the Angular component. The Material UI Grid has a built-in column hiding UI, which can be used through the Pivot Grid's toolbar to change the visible state of the columns. In addition, developers can always define the column hiding UI as a separate component and place it anywhere they want on the page.

    Angular Pivot Grid Column Hiding Example

    Pivot Grid Setup

    Let's start by creating our Pivot Grid and binding it to our data. We will also enable both filtering and sorting for the columns.

    Toolbar's Column Hiding UI

    The built-in Column Hiding UI is placed inside an IgxDropDownComponent in the Pivot Grid's toolbar. We can show/hide the Column Hiding UI by using this exact dropdown. For this purpose all we have to do is set both the IgxGridToolbarActionsComponent and the IgxGridToolbarHidingComponent inside of the Pivot Grid. We will also add a title to our toolbar by using the IgxGridToolbarTitleComponent and a custom style for our Pivot Grid's wrapper.

    The Pivot Grid provides us with some useful properties when it comes to using the toolbar's column hiding UI. By using the igx-grid-toolbar-hiding title property, we will set the title that is displayed inside the dropdown button in the toolbar.

    By using the columnsAreaMaxHeight property of the IgxGridToolbarHidingComponent, we can set the maximum height of the area that contains the column actions. This way if we have a lot of actions and not all of them can fit in the container, a scrollbar will appear, which will allow us to scroll to any action we want.

    // columnHiding.component.ts
    
    public ngAfterViewInit() {        
        this.hidingActionRef.columnsAreaMaxHeight = "200px";
    }
    

    In order to use the expanded set of functionalities for the column hiding UI, we can use the IgxColumnActionsComponent's columnsAreaMaxHeight property. This way we can use it according to our application's requirements.

    You can see the result of the code from above at the beginning of this article in the Angular Column Hiding Example section.

    Custom Column Hiding UI

    Let's say we want to manually define our IgxColumnActionsComponent, add the IgxColumnHidingDirective so that it knows what its purpose would be and put it anywhere on the page. First, however, we need to import the IgxColumnActionsModule.

    // app.module.ts
    
    ...
    import {
        ...
        IgxColumnActionsModule 
    } from 'igniteui-angular';
    // import { ..., IgxColumnActionsModule } from '@infragistics/igniteui-angular'; for licensed package
    
    @NgModule({
        ...
        imports: [..., IgxColumnActionsModule],
    })
    export class AppModule {}
    

    Now let's create our IgxColumnActionsComponent. In our application, we will place it next to the grid (which is not the case with the toolbar's column hiding UI, where the component is inside a dropdown by design). We will also set the columns property of the component to the columns of our Pivot Grid and include some custom styles to make our application look even better!

    Add title and filter prompt

    A couple more things we can do in order to enrich the user experience of our column hiding component is to set the title and the filterColumnsPrompt properties. The title is displayed on the top and the filterColumnsPrompt is the prompt text that is displayed in the filter input of our column hiding UI.

    <!--columnHiding.component.html-->
    
    <div class="columnHidingContainer">
        <igx-column-actions igxColumnHiding #columnHidingUI [columns]="pivotGrid.columns"
                           title="Column Hiding" filterColumnsPrompt="Type here to search">
        </igx-column-actions>
    </div>
    

    Add column display order options

    We can also allow the user to choose the display order of the columns in the column hiding UI. For this purpose we will use the columnDisplayOrder property, which is an enumeration type property and has the following options:

    • Alphabetical (order the columns alphabetically)
    • DisplayOrder (order the columns according to the way they are displayed in the Pivot Grid)

    Let's create a couple of nicely designed radio buttons for our options! We just have to go ahead and get the IgxRadio module.

    // app.module.ts
    
    ...
    import {
        ...
        IgxRadioModule    
    } from 'igniteui-angular';
    // import { ..., IgxRadioModule } from '@infragistics/igniteui-angular'; for licensed package
    
    @NgModule({
        ...
        imports: [..., IgxRadioModule],    
    })
    export class AppModule {}
    

    Now all we have to do is bind the checked property of both radio buttons respectively with different conditions and handle their click events.

    <!--columnHiding.component.html-->
    
    <div class="columnHidingContainer">
        ...
        <div class="columnsOrderOptionsContainer">
            <igx-radio [checked]="columnHidingUI.columnDisplayOrder === 'Alphabetical'"
                       (click)="columnHidingUI.columnDisplayOrder = 'Alphabetical'">
                Alphabetical order
            </igx-radio>
            <igx-radio [checked]="columnHidingUI.columnDisplayOrder === 'DisplayOrder'"
                       (click)="columnHidingUI.columnDisplayOrder = 'DisplayOrder'">
                Display order
            </igx-radio>
        </div>
    </div>
    

    Disable hiding of a column

    We can easily prevent the user from being able to hide columns through the column hiding UI by simply setting their disableHiding property to true.

    If all went well, this is how our column hiding UI component should look like:

    Styling

    To get started with styling the column actions component, we need to import the index file, where all the theme functions and component mixins live:

    @use "igniteui-angular/theming" as *;
    
    // IMPORTANT: Prior to Ignite UI for Angular version 13 use:
    // @import '~igniteui-angular/lib/core/styles/themes/index';
    

    By using the simplest approach, we create a new theme that extends the column-actions-theme and accepts the $title-color and the $background-color parameters.

    $custom-column-actions-theme: column-actions-theme(
        $background-color: steelblue,
        $title-color: gold
    );
    

    As seen, the column-actions-theme only controls colors for the column actions container, but does not affect the buttons, checkboxes and the input-group inside of it. Let's say we want to style the buttons as well, so we will create a new button theme:

    $custom-button: button-theme($flat-text-color: gold, $disabled-color: black);
    

    In this example we only changed the text-color of the flat buttons and the button disabled color, but the button-theme provides way more parameters to control the button style.

    The last step is to include the component mixins, each with its respective theme:

    @include column-actions($custom-column-actions-theme);
    .igx-column-actions {
        @include button($custom-button);
    }
    
    Note

    We scope the igx-button mixin within .igx-column-actions, so that only the column hiding buttons would be styled. Otherwise other buttons in the grid would be affected too.

    Note

    If the component is using an Emulated ViewEncapsulation, it is necessary to penetrate this encapsulation using ::ng-deep:

    :host {
        ::ng-deep {
            @include column-actions($custom-column-actions-theme);
            .igx-column-actions {
                @include button($custom-button);
            }
        }
    }
    

    Defining a color palette

    Instead of hardcoding the color values like we just did, we can achieve greater flexibility in terms of colors by using the igx-palette and igx-color functions.

    igx-palette generates a color palette based on the primary and secondary colors that are passed:

    $yellow-color: gold;
    $blue-color: steelblue;
    
    $custom-palette: palette($primary: $blue-color, $secondary: $yellow-color);
    

    And then with igx-color we can easily retrieve color from the palette.

    $custom-column-actions-theme: column-actions-theme(
        $palette: $custom-palette,
        $title-color: color($custom-palette, "secondary", 400),
        $background-color: color($custom-palette, "primary", 200)
    );
    
    $custom-button: button-theme(
        $palette: $custom-palette,
        $flat-text-color: color($custom-palette, "secondary", 400),
        $disabled-color: black
    );
    
    Note

    The igx-color and igx-palette are powerful functions for generating and retrieving colors. Please refer to Palettes topic for detailed guidance on how to use them.

    Using Schemas

    Going further with the theming engine, you can build a robust and flexible structure that benefits from schemas. A schema is a recipe of a theme.

    // Extending the dark column actions schema
    $custom-column-actions-schema: extend($_dark-column-actions,
        (
            title-color:(
               color: ("secondary", 400)
            ),
            background-color:(
               color: ("primary", 200)
            )
        )
    );
    // Extending the dark button schema
    $custom-button-schema: extend($_dark-button,
        (           
            flat-text-color:(
               color:("secondary", 500)
            ),
            disabled-color:(
               color:("primary", 700)
            )
        )
    );
    

    In order to apply our custom schemas we have to extend one of the globals (light or dark), which is basically pointing out the components with a custom schema, and after that add it to the respective component themes:

    // Extending the global dark-schema
    $custom-dark-schema: extend($dark-schema,(
        igx-column-actions: $custom-column-actions-schema,
        igx-button: $custom-button-schema
    ));
    
    // Defining column-actions-theme with the global dark schema
    $custom-column-actions-theme: column-actions-theme(
      $palette: $custom-palette,
      $schema: $custom-dark-schema
    );
    
    // Defining button-theme with the global dark schema
    $custom-button: button-theme(
      $palette: $custom-palette,
      $schema: $custom-dark-schema
    );
    

    Don't forget to include the themes in the same way as it was demonstrated above.

    Demo

    API References

    In this article we learned how to use the built-in column hiding UI in the Pivot Grid's toolbar and we defined it as a separate component as well. We introduced a UI that allows the user to choose between different column orders and we set our own custom title and filter prompt texts. We also used an additional Ignite UI for Angular component - the IgxRadio button.

    The column hiding UI has a few more APIs to explore, which are listed below.

    Additional components and/or directives with relative APIs that were used:

    IgxPivotGridComponent properties:

    IgxColumnComponent properties:

    IgxGridToolbarComponent properties:

    IgxGridToolbarComponent components:

    IgxGridToolbarComponent methods:

    IgxPivotGridComponent events:

    IgxRadioComponent

    Styles:

    Additional Resources

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