React Data Grid Column summary
Calculate sum, min, max, count, average or custom aggregates of individual columns' data, using Handsontable's aggregate functions.
Overview
The ColumnSummary
plugin lets you quickly calculate and display a column summary.
To customize your column summaries, you can:
- Decide how a summary is calculated:
- Either select one of the built-in summary functions
- Or implement a custom summary function
- Select columns and ranges of rows that you want to summarize
- Display your summary result in a specific cell
Column summary example
This example calculates and displays five different column summaries:
Built-in summary functions
To decide how a column summary is calculated, you can use one of the following summary functions:
Function | Description |
---|---|
sum | Returns the sum of all values in a column. |
min | Returns the lowest value in a column. |
max | Returns the highest value in a column. |
count | Returns the number of all non-empty cells in a column. |
average | Returns the sum of all values in a column, divided by the number of non-empty cells in that column. |
custom | Lets you implement a custom summary function. |
Column summary options
You can customize each of your column summaries with configuration options.
For the full list of available options, see the API reference.
Set up a column summary
To set up a column summary, follow the steps below.
ColumnSummary
plugin
Step 1: Enable the To enable the ColumnSummary
plugin, set the columnSummary
configuration option to an array of objects. Each object represents a single column summary.
import { HotTable } from '@handsontable/react';
import { registerAllModules } from 'handsontable/registry';
import 'handsontable/dist/handsontable.full.min.css';
// register Handsontable's modules
registerAllModules();
export const ExampleComponent = () => {
return (
<HotTable
autoWrapRow={true}
autoWrapCol={true}
licenseKey="non-commercial-and-evaluation"
data={[
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5],
[6, 7, 8, 9, 10],
[11, 12, 13, 14, 15]
]}
colHeaders={true}
rowHeaders={true}
columnSummary={[
{},
{}
]}
/>
);
};
You can also set the columnSummary
option to a function.
Step 2: Select cells that you want to summarize
By default, a column summary takes all cells of the column in which it displays its result (see the destinationColumn
option in step 4).
To summarize any other column, use the sourceColumn
option:
columnSummary={[
{
// set this column summary to summarize the first column
// (i.e. a column with physical index `0`)
sourceColumn: 0,
},
{
// set this column summary to summarize the second column
// (i.e. a column with physical index `1`)
sourceColumn: 1,
}
]}
You can also summarize individual ranges of rows (rather than a whole column). To do this, set the ranges
option to an array of arrays, where each array represents a single row range.
columnSummary={[
{
sourceColumn: 0,
// set this column summary to only summarize rows with physical indexes 0-2, 4, and 6-8
ranges: [
[0, 2], [4], [6, 8]
],
},
{
sourceColumn: 0,
// set this column summary to only summarize rows with physical indexes 0-5
ranges: [
[0, 5]
],
}
]}
Step 3: Calculate your summary
Now, decide how you want to calculate your column summary.
You can:
- Either select one of the built-in summary functions
- Or implement a custom summary function
columnSummary={[
{
sourceColumn: 0,
// set this column summary to return the sum all values in the summarized column
type: 'sum',
},
{
sourceColumn: 1,
// set this column summary to return the lowest value in the summarized column
type: 'min',
}
]}
Step 4: Provide the destination cell's coordinates
To display your column summary result in a cell, provide the destination cell's coordinates.
Set the destinationRow
and destinationColumn
options to the physical coordinates of your required cell.
columnSummary={[
{
sourceColumn: 0,
type: 'sum',
// set this column summary to display its result in cell (4, 0)
destinationRow: 4,
destinationColumn: 0
},
{
sourceColumn: 1,
type: 'min',
// set this column summary to display its result in cell (4, 1)
destinationRow: 4,
destinationColumn: 1
}
]}
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Don't change the className
metadata of the summary row.
If you need to style the summary row, use the class name assigned automatically by the ColumnSummary
plugin: columnSummaryResult
.
Step 5: Make room for the destination cell
The ColumnSummary
plugin doesn't automatically add new rows to display its summary results.
So, if you always want to display your column summary result below your existing rows, you need to:
- Add an empty row to the bottom of your grid (to avoid overwriting your existing rows).
- Reverse row coordinates for your column summary (to always display your summary result at the bottom).
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To reverse row coordinates for your column summary, set the reversedRowCoords
option to true
, and adjust the destinationRow
coordinate.
Set up column summaries, using a function
Instead of setting up the column summary options manually, you can provide the whole column summary configuration as a function that returns a required array of objects.
The example below sets up five different column summaries. To do this, it:
- Defines a function named
generateData
which generates an array of arrays with dummy numeric data, and which lets you add an empty row at the bottom of the grid (to make room for displaying column summaries) - Sets Handsontable's
columnSummary
configuration option to a function that:- Iterates over visible columns
- For each visible column, adds a column summary with a configuration
- To display the column summaries in the empty row added by
generateData
, sets thereversedRowCoords
option totrue
, and thedestinationRow
option to0
Using a function to provide a column summary configuration lets you set up all sorts of more complex column summaries. For example, you can sum subtotals for nested groups:
Implement a custom summary function
Apart from using the built-in summary functions, you can also implement your own custom function that performs any summary calculation you want.
To implement a custom summary function:
- Set up your column summary.
- In your column summary object, set the
type
option to'custom'
:
columnSummary={[{
sourceColumn: 1,
// set the `type` option to `'custom'`
type: 'custom',
destinationRow: 0,
destinationColumn: 5,
reversedRowCoords: true
}]}
- In your column summary object, add your custom summary function:
columnSummary={[{
type: 'custom',
destinationRow: 0,
destinationColumn: 5,
reversedRowCoords: true,
// add your custom summary function
customFunction: function(endpoint) {
// implement your function here
}
}]}
This example implements a function that counts the number of even values in a column:
Round a column summary result
You can round a column summary result to a specific number of digits after the decimal point.
To enable this feature, set the roundFloat
option to your preferred number of digits between 0 and 100.
See the following example:
The roundFloat
option accepts the following values:
Value | Behavior |
---|---|
false (default) | Don't round the column summary result. |
true | Round the result to 0 digits after the decimal point. |
Integer 0-100 (n) | Round the result to n digits after the decimal point. |
Integer < 0 | Round the result to 0 digits after the decimal point. |
Integer > 100 | Round the result to 100 digits after the decimal point. |
If you enable roundFloat
, the data type returned by Handsontable's data-retrieving methods
(like getDataAtCell()
) changes from number
to string
.
Handle non-numeric values
To summarize a column that contains non-numeric data, you can:
- Either force your column summary to treat non-numeric values as numeric values
- Or throw an error whenever a non-numeric value is passed to your column summary
- Or make your column summary skip any non-numeric values
Force numeric values
You can force your column summary to treat non-numeric values as numeric values.
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The forceNumeric
option uses JavaScript's parseFloat()
function.
This means that e.g., 3c
is treated as 3
, but c3
is still treated as c3
.
To enable this feature, set the forceNumeric
option to true
(by default, forceNumeric
is set to false
). For example:
Throw data type errors
You can throw a data type error whenever a non-numeric value is passed to your column summary.
To throw data type errors, set the suppressDataTypeErrors
option to false
(by default, suppressDataTypeErrors
is set to true
). For example:
Related API reference
- Configuration options:
- Plugins: