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    Data (Accessor) Columns

    Data columns are used to display data and are the default columns that are created when you create a column with an accessorKey or accessorFn.

    The table can perform processing on the data of a data column, such as sorting, filtering, grouping, etc.

    The other type of column that you can make is a display column, which you can learn more about in the next section.

    Accessors (Connect a column to data)

    Each column definition must have at least an accessorKey (or a combination of an id and accessorFn) and a header property. The accessorKey/accessorFn property is the key that will be used to join the data from the data keys. The header property is used to display the column header, but is also used in other places in the table.

    Method 1 - Using an accessorKey (Recommended)

    The simplest and most common way to define a column is to use the accessorKey property. The accessorKey property is the key that will be used to join the data from the data keys.

    The accessorKey must match one of the keys in your data, or else no data will show up in the column. The accessorKey also supports dot notation, so you can access nested data.

    By default, the accessorKey will double as the id for the column, but if you need the id of the column to be different than the accessorKey, you can use the id property in addition.

    const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<Customer>[]>( //TS helps with the autocomplete while writing columns
    () => [
    {
    accessorKey: 'username', //normal recommended usage of an accessorKey
    header: 'Username',
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'name.firstName', //example of dot notation used to access nested data
    header: 'First Name',
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'name.lastName', //example of dot notation used to access nested data
    header: 'Last Name',
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'customerAge',
    id: 'age' //id overridden, usually not necessary to do this, but can be helpful
    header: 'Age',
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    Method 2 - Using an accessorFn and id

    You can alternatively use the accessorFn property. Here are at least three ways you can use it.

    In each case, the id property is now required since there is no accessorKey for MRT to derive it from.

    const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<Customer>[]>(
    () => [
    {
    //simple accessorFn that works the same way as an `accessorKey`
    accessorFn: (row) => row.username,
    id: 'username',
    header: 'Username',
    },
    {
    //accessorFn function that combines multiple data together
    accessorFn: (row) => `${row.firstName} ${row.lastName}`,
    id: 'name',
    header: 'Name',
    },
    {
    //accessorFn used to access nested data, though you could just use dot notation in an accessorKey
    accessorFn: (row) => row.personalInfo.age,
    id: 'age',
    header: 'Age',
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    Method 3 - Using createMRTColumnHelper

    New in V2 (After many requests)

    Alternatively you can use the createMRTColumnHelper utility function to define your columns definitions in a slightly more type-safe way. Instantiate a columnHelper by passing in your TData type as a generic argument. Then the first argument of the columnHelper.accessor() method can be either an accessorKey or an accessorFn. Then you can specify the rest of the column options as the second argument.

    const columnHelper = createMRTColumnHelper<Customer>();
    const columns = [
    //accessorKey as first argument, rest of column options as second argument
    columnHelper.accessor('name', {
    header: 'Last Name',
    }),
    //accessorFn as first argument, rest of column options as second argument
    columnHelper.accessor((row) => Number(row.age), {
    header: 'Age',
    id: 'age', //id is required when using accessorFn
    }),
    ];

    Custom Header Render

    If you want to pass in custom JSX to render the header, you can pass in a Header option in addition to the header string property.

    The header (lowercase) property is still required and still must only be a string because it is used within multiple components in the table and has string manipulation methods performed on it.

    const columns = useMemo(
    () => [
    {
    accessorKey: 'name',
    header: 'Name',
    Header: ({ column }) => (
    <i style={{ color: 'red' }}>{column.columnDef.header}</i>
    ), //arrow function
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'age',
    header: 'Age',
    Header: <i style={{ color: 'red' }}>Age</i>, //plain jsx with no function
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    Custom Cell Render

    Similarly, the data cells in a column can have a custom JSX render with the Cell option.

    const columns = useMemo(
    () => [
    {
    accessorKey: 'salary',
    header: 'Salary',
    Cell: ({ cell }) => (
    <span>${cell.getValue<number>().toLocaleString()}</span>
    ),
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'profileImage',
    header: 'Profile Image',
    Cell: ({ cell }) => <img src={cell.getValue<string>()} />,
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    If you want to pass in custom JSX to render the footer, you can pass in a Footer option. If no custom markup is needed, you can just use the footer string property.

    The footer cells can be a good place to put totals or other summary information.

    const columns = useMemo(
    () => [
    {
    accessorKey: 'name',
    header: 'Name',
    footer: 'Name', //simple string header
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'age',
    header: 'Age',
    //Custom footer markup for a aggregation calculation
    Footer: () => (
    <Stack>
    Max Age:
    <Box color="warning.main">{Math.round(maxAge)}</Box>
    </Stack>
    ),
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    See the Customize Components Guide for more ways to style and customize header and cell components.

    Enable or Disable Features Per Column

    In the same way that you can pass props to the main <MaterialReactTable /> component to enable or disable features, you can also specify options on the column definitions to enable or disable features on a per-column basis.

    const columns = useMemo(
    () => [
    {
    accessorKey: 'salary',
    header: 'Salary',
    enableClickToCopy: true, //enable click to copy on this column
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'profileImage',
    header: 'Profile Image',
    enableSorting: false, //disable sorting on this column
    },
    ],
    [],
    );

    See all the column options you can use in the Column Options API Reference.

    Set Column Widths

    This topic is covered in detail in the Column Resizing Guide, but here is a brief overview.

    Setting a CSS (sx or style) width prop will NOT work. Material React Table (or, more accurately, TanStack Table) will keep track and set the widths of each column internally.

    You CAN, however, change the default width of any column by setting its size option on the column definition. minSize and maxSize are also available to set the minimum and maximum width of the column during resizing.

    const columns = [
    {
    accessorKey: 'id',
    header: 'ID',
    size: 50, //small column
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'username',
    header: 'Username',
    minSize: 100, //min size enforced during resizing
    maxSize: 200, //max size enforced during resizing
    size: 180, //medium column
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'email',
    header: 'Email',
    size: 300, //large column
    },
    ];

    If exact column sizes are important to you, you may want to consider using one of the other layoutModes other than the default "semantic" layouMode.

    Layout Modes

    Material React Table has 3 layout modes that affect how columns styles are applied internally. Depending on which features you enable, the layoutMode table option will automatically change to the appropriate value, though you can override it with your own value if you want.

    1. "semantic" (default with default features) - uses default css styles that come with <table>, <tr>, <td>, etc. elements.

    2. "grid" (default when virtualization is enabled) - uses CSS Grid and Flexbox styles instead of default styles.

    3. "grid-no-grow" (default when column resizing is enabled) - uses CSS Grid and Flexbox styles, but also sets flex-grow: 0 on all columns and adds an empty "spacer" column to the end of the table to fill the potential remaining space.

    If you want your columns to have an absolute width, you can use the "grid-no-grow" layout mode and set the size option on each column.

    const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    columns,
    data,
    layoutMode: 'grid-no-grow', //absolute column widths that will NOT grow to fill remaining space
    });

    The 'grid-no-grow' layoutMode is new in MRT V2.

    Set Column Alignment

    By default, all columns are left-aligned. You can change the alignment of a column by setting the align option to either "center", "right", or "justify" in the muiTableHeadCellProps and muiTableBodyCellProps props/column options.

    const columns = [
    {
    accessorKey: 'id',
    header: 'ID',
    //right align the header and body cells
    muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    align: 'right',
    },
    muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    align: 'right',
    },
    },
    {
    accessorKey: 'username',
    header: 'Username',
    //center align the header and body cells
    muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    align: 'center',
    },
    muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    align: 'center',
    },
    },
    ];

    Demo

    Open StackblitzOpen Code SandboxOpen on GitHub
    HomerSimpson39$53,000.00
    MargeSimpson38$60,000.00
    BartSimpson10$46,000.00
    LisaSimpson8$120,883.00
    MaggieSimpson1$22.00
    1-5 of 5

    Source Code

    1import { useMemo } from 'react';
    2import {
    3 MaterialReactTable,
    4 useMaterialReactTable,
    5 type MRT_ColumnDef,
    6} from 'material-react-table';
    7import { data, type Person } from './makeData';
    8
    9const Example = () => {
    10 const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<Person>[]>(
    11 () => [
    12 {
    13 accessorKey: 'firstName',
    14 header: 'First Name',
    15 size: 100,
    16 muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    17 align: 'center',
    18 },
    19 muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    20 align: 'center',
    21 },
    22 },
    23 {
    24 accessorKey: 'lastName',
    25 header: 'Last Name',
    26 size: 100,
    27 muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    28 align: 'center',
    29 },
    30 muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    31 align: 'center',
    32 },
    33 },
    34 {
    35 accessorKey: 'age',
    36 header: 'Age',
    37 muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    38 align: 'right',
    39 },
    40 muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    41 align: 'right',
    42 },
    43 },
    44 {
    45 accessorKey: 'salary',
    46 header: 'Salary',
    47 muiTableHeadCellProps: {
    48 align: 'right',
    49 },
    50 muiTableBodyCellProps: {
    51 align: 'right',
    52 },
    53 Cell: ({ cell }) =>
    54 cell
    55 .getValue<number>()
    56 .toLocaleString('en-US', { style: 'currency', currency: 'USD' }),
    57 },
    58 ],
    59 [],
    60 );
    61
    62 const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    63 columns,
    64 data,
    65 });
    66
    67 return <MaterialReactTable table={table} />;
    68};
    69
    70export default Example;
    71