Usage
Here is a brief overview of how to use Mantine React Table. This is a very simple example and will not cover all features of the library, but should be a great starting point.
Setup
To start using MantineReactTable, you first need to install mantine-react-table
and the necessary Mantine dependencies.
There are additional steps and customizations you can do with your Mantine Theme, if you have not set it up in your application already. Check out the Mantine docs for more information.
If you need to change the colors of the table components, advanced Mantine Theming is covered in the Customize Components guide.
Import MantineReactTable and useMantineReactTable
Once you have everything installed, you can import from mantine-react-table
like this:
MantineReactTable
is the main component that you will use to render your table.
useMantineReactTable
is the React hook that you will use to define all the columns, data, and other options for your table.
Creating Data/Rows
Your data must be an array of objects that have properties matching the accessors in your column definitions. The objects themselves can theoretically be in any shape, but it will be easier to set up your columns if your data is already in a flat object format like the example below, but it is not required.
Common Gotcha: When defining
data
that will be passed to auseMantineReactTable
hook, make sure that thedata
is memoized or stable (i.e.useState
,useMemo
, defined outside of your table component, etc.). Otherwise you may get infinite renders.
Simple Data Example
Your data does NOT have to be created statically like this, of course. More than likely, your data is being fetched from a backend API. Check out the Remote Data examples to see how you can fetch data and pass it to your tables.
Creating Columns
There are several different ways to define columns, depending on your needs. Let's create some basic "data"
columns. That is, columns that connect to our data. Most of the time, we can simply use the accessorKey
property to access the data if the data is in a simple format. Alternatively, if some data in a column needs some logic or processing, you can use the accessorFn
property to define a function that returns the data for each cell.
Simple Column Definition Example
Note: Do NOT have your accessors resolve JSX or markup. That's what custom
Cell
renders are for. Accessors should only return primitive data so that the table can sort, filter, search, and group properly.
Full Simple Example
Put it all together, and you have a basic table! You can also play around and enable some features, either per column in the column definitions, or as table options passed to useMantineReactTable
.
Note: Again, it is very important that the columns and data definitions are memoized or stable. Otherwise, the entire table will be re-rendered during every react re-render in your application, which can lead to performance issues. To make a variable stable, store it in
useState
, wrap it inuseMemo
, define it outside of a component, or in your state management tool of choice so it does not get recreated on every render and cause an infinite re-render loop.
Live Code Sandbox Example
Next Steps
There are numerous ways you can customize the behavior and look and feel of your Mantine React Table. View some of the examples to see how you can customize your table, and visit the props page to see all the props that you can use to turn features on and off and customize the look and feel of your table.
Also, be sure to check out all the Fundamental Guides and any of the Advanced Feature Guides you may be interested in to learn more about the different features you can toggle on and off, or customize.