Rails Clickable link_to entire table row [duplicate] - ruby-on-rails

I'm using Bootstrap and the following doesn't work:
<tbody>
<a href="#">
<tr>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</a>
</tbody>

Author's note I:
Please look at other answers below, especially ones that do not use jquery.
Author's note II:
Preserved for posterity but surely the wrong approach in 2020. (Was non idiomatic even back in 2017)
Original Answer
You are using Bootstrap which means you are using jQuery :^), so one way to do it is:
<tbody>
<tr class='clickable-row' data-href='url://'>
<td>Blah Blah</td> <td>1234567</td> <td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
$(".clickable-row").click(function() {
window.location = $(this).data("href");
});
});
Of course you don't have to use href or switch locations, you can do whatever you like in the click handler function. Read up on jQuery and how to write handlers;
Advantage of using a class over id is that you can apply the solution to multiple rows:
<tbody>
<tr class='clickable-row' data-href='url://link-for-first-row/'>
<td>Blah Blah</td> <td>1234567</td> <td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
<tr class='clickable-row' data-href='url://some-other-link/'>
<td>More money</td> <td>1234567</td> <td>£800,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
and your code base doesn't change. The same handler would take care of all the rows.
Another option
You can use Bootstrap jQuery callbacks like this (in a document.ready callback):
$("#container").on('click-row.bs.table', function (e, row, $element) {
window.location = $element.data('href');
});
This has the advantage of not being reset upon table sorting (which happens with the other option).
Note
Since this was posted window.document.location is obsolete (or deprecated at the very least) use window.location instead.

You can't do that. It is invalid HTML. You can't put a <a> in between a <tbody> and a <tr>. Try this instead:
<tr onclick="window.location='#';">
...
</tr>
add style for pointer view
[data-href] { cursor: pointer; }
When you work up to it, you'd want to use JavaScript to assign the click handler outside the HTML.

You could include an anchor inside every <td>, like so:
<tr>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>more text</td>
</tr>
You could then use display:block; on the anchors to make the full row clickable.
tr:hover {
background: red;
}
td a {
display: block;
border: 1px solid black;
padding: 16px;
}
Example jsFiddle here.
This is probably about as optimum as you're going to get it unless you resort to JavaScript.

A linked table row is possible, but not with the standard <table> elements. You can do it using the display: table style properties. Here and here are some fiddles to demonstrate.
This code should do the trick:
.table {
display: table;
}
.row {
display: table-row;
}
.cell {
display: table-cell;
padding: 10px;
}
.row:hover {
background-color: #cccccc;
}
.cell:hover {
background-color: #e5e5e5;
}
<link href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/twitter-bootstrap/2.3.2/css/bootstrap-combined.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
<div role="grid" class="table">
<div role="row" class="row">
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
1.1
</div>
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
1.2
</div>
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
1.3
</div>
</div>
<a role="row" class="row" href="#">
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
2.1
</div>
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
2.2
</div>
<div role="gridcell" class="cell">
2.3
</div>
</a>
</div>
Note that ARIA roles are needed to ensure proper accessibility since the standard <table> elements are not used. You may need to add additional roles like role="columnheader" if applicable. Find out more at the guide here.

Achieved using standard Bootstrap 4.3+ as follows - no jQuery nor any extra css classes needed!
The key is to use stretched-link on the text within the cell and defining <tr> as a containing block.
<link href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<table class="table table-hover">
<tbody>
<tr style="transform: rotate(0);">
<th scope="row">1</th>
<td>Mark</td>
<td>Otto</td>
<td>#mdo</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">2</th>
<td>Jacob</td>
<td>Thornton</td>
<td>#fat</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">3</th>
<td>Larry</td>
<td>the Bird</td>
<td>#twitter</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can define containing block in different ways for example setting transform to not none value (as in example above).
For more information read here's the Bootstrap documentation for stretched-link.

A much more flexible solution is to target anything with the data-href attribute. This was you can reuse the code easily in different places.
<tbody>
<tr data-href="https://google.com">
<td>Col 1</td>
<td>Col 2</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
Then in your jQuery just target any element with that attribute:
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
$('*[data-href]').on('click', function() {
window.location = $(this).data("href");
});
});
And don't forget to style your css:
[data-href] {
cursor: pointer;
}
Now you can add the data-href attribute to any element and it will work. When I write snippets like this I like them to be flexible. Feel free to add a vanilla js solution to this if you have one.

One solution that was not mentioned earlier is to use a single link in a cell and some CSS to extend this link over the cells:
table {
border: 1px solid;
width: 400px;
overflow: hidden;
}
tr:hover {
background: gray;
}
tr td {
border: 1px solid;
}
tr td:first-child {
position:relative;
}
a:before {
content: '';
position:absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
display: block;
width: 400px;
}
<table>
<tr>
<td>First column</td>
<td>Second column</td>
<td>Third column</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>First column</td>
<td>Second column</td>
<td>Third column</td>
</tr>
</table>

Here is simple solution..
<tr style='cursor: pointer; cursor: hand;' onclick="window.location='google.com';"></tr>

You can use this bootstrap component:
http://jasny.github.io/bootstrap/javascript/#rowlink
Jasny Bootstrap
The missing components for your favorite front-end framework.
<table class="table table-striped table-bordered table-hover">
<thead>
<tr><th>Name</th><th>Description</th><th>Actions</th></tr>
</thead>
<tbody data-link="row" class="rowlink">
<tr><td>Input mask</td><td>Input masks can be used to force the user to enter data conform a specific format.</td><td class="rowlink-skip">Action</td></tr>
<tr><td>jasny.net</td><td>Shared knowledge of Arnold Daniels aka Jasny.</td><td class="rowlink-skip">Action</td></tr>
<tr><td>Launch modal</td><td>Toggle a modal via JavaScript by clicking this row.</td><td class="rowlink-skip">Action</td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>
Usage
Via data attributes
Add class .rowlink and attribute data-link="row" to a <table> or <tbody> element. For other options append the name to data-, as in data-target="a.mainlink" A cell can be excluded by adding the .rowlink-skip class to the <td>.
Via JavaScript
Call the input mask via javascript:
$('tbody.rowlink').rowlink()

You can add the button role to a table row and Bootstrap will change the cursor without any css changes. I decided to use that role as a way to easily make any row clickable with very little code.
Html
<table class="table table-striped table-hover">
<tbody>
<tr role="button" data-href="#">
<td>Cell 1</td>
<td>Cell 2</td>
<td>Cell 3</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
jQuery
$(function(){
$(".table").on("click", "tr[role=\"button\"]", function (e) {
window.location = $(this).data("href");
});
});
You can apply this same principle to add the button role to any tag.

There is a nice way to technically do it with <a> tag inside <tr>, which might be semantically incorrect (might give you a browser warning), but will work with no JavaScript/jQuery required:
<!-- HTML -->
<tbody>
<tr class="bs-table-row">
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
<a class="bs-row-link" href="/your-link-here"></a>
</tr>
</tbody>
/* CSS */
.bs-table-row {
position: 'relative';
}
.bs-row-link {
position: 'absolute';
left: 0;
height: '36px'; // or different row height based on your requirements
width: '100%';
cursor: 'pointer';
}
PS: Notice the trick here is to put <a> tag as last element, otherwise it will try to take the space of the first <td> cell.
PPS: Now your entire row will be clickable and you can use this link to open in new tab as well (Ctrl/CMD+click)

A very easy option is just use on-click, and more correct, in my point of view, because this separate the view and controller, and you don't need to hard code the URL or whatever more you need do accomplish with the click.
It works with Angular ng-click too.
<table>
<tr onclick="myFunction(this)">
<td>Click to show rowIndex</td>
</tr>
</table>
<script>
function myFunction(x) {
alert("Row index is: " + x.rowIndex);
}
</script>
Exemple working here

You can use onclick javascript method in tr and make it clickable, also if you need to build your link due to some details you can declare a function in javascript and call it in onclick, passing some values.

Here is a way by putting a transparent A element over the table rows. Advantages are:
is a real link element: on hover changes pointer, shows target link in status bar, can be keyboard navigated, can be opened in new tab or window, the URL can be copied, etc
the table looks the same as without the link added
no changes in table code itself
Disadvantages:
size of the A element must be set in a script, both on creation and after any changes to the size of the row it covers (otherwise it could be done with no JavaScript at all, which is still possible if the table size is also set in HTML or CSS)
The table stays as is:
<table id="tab1">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
Add the links (for each row) via jQuery JavaScript by inserting an A element into each first column and setting the needed properties:
// v1, fixed for IE and Chrome
// v0, worked on Firefox only
// width needed for adjusting the width of the A element
var mywidth=$('#tab1').width();
$('#tab1 tbody>tr>td:nth-child(1)').each(function(index){
$(this).css('position', 'relative');// debug: .css('background-color', '#f11');
// insert the <A> element
var myA=$('<A>');
$(this).append(myA);
var myheight=$(this).height();
myA.css({//"border":'1px solid #2dd', border for debug only
'display': 'block',
'left': '0',
'top': '0',
'position': 'absolute'
})
.attr('href','the link here')
.width(mywidth)
.height(myheight)
;
});
The width and height setting can be tricky, if many paddings and margins are used, but in general a few pixels off should not even matter.
Live demo here: http://jsfiddle.net/qo0dx0oo/ (works in Firefox, but not IE or Chrome, there the link is positioned wrong)
Fixed for Chrome and IE (still works in FF too): http://jsfiddle.net/qo0dx0oo/2/

This code bellow will make your whole table clickable. Clicking the links in this example will show the link in an alert dialog instead of following the link.
The HTML:
Here's the HTML behind the above example:
<table id="example">
<tr>
<th> </th>
<th>Name</th>
<th>Description</th>
<th>Price</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Edit</td>
<td>Apples</td>
<td>Blah blah blah blah</td>
<td>10.23</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Edit</td>
<td>Bananas</td>
<td>Blah blah blah blah</td>
<td>11.45</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Edit</td>
<td>Oranges</td>
<td>Blah blah blah blah</td>
<td>12.56</td>
</tr>
</table>
The CSS
And the CSS:
table#example {
border-collapse: collapse;
}
#example tr {
background-color: #eee;
border-top: 1px solid #fff;
}
#example tr:hover {
background-color: #ccc;
}
#example th {
background-color: #fff;
}
#example th, #example td {
padding: 3px 5px;
}
#example td:hover {
cursor: pointer;
}
The jQuery
And finally the jQuery which makes the magic happen:
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#example tr').click(function() {
var href = $(this).find("a").attr("href");
if(href) {
window.location = href;
}
});
});
What it does is when a row is clicked, a search is done for the href belonging to an anchor. If one is found, the window's location is set to that href.

I know someone has written pretty much the same already, however my way is the correct way (div cannot be child of A) and also it's better to use classes.
You can imitate a table using CSS and make an A element the row
<div class="table" style="width:100%;">
<a href="#" class="tr">
<span class="td">
cell 1
</span>
<span class="td">
cell 2
</span>
</a>
</div>
css:
.table{display:table;}
.tr{display:table-row;}
.td{display:table-cell;}
.tr:hover{background-color:#ccc;}

i would prefer to use onclick="" attribute as it is easy to use and understand for newbie like
<tr onclick="window.location='any-page.php'">
<td>UserName</td>
<td>Email</td>
<td>Address</td>
</tr>

Here's an article that explains how to approach doing this in 2020: https://www.robertcooper.me/table-row-links
The article explains 3 possible solutions:
Using JavaScript.
Wrapping all table cells with anchorm elements.
Using <div> elements instead of native HTML table elements in order to have tables rows as <a> elements.
The article goes into depth on how to implement each solution (with links to CodePens) and also considers edge cases, such as how to approach a situation where you want to add links inside you table cells (having nested <a> elements is not valid HTML, so you need to workaround that).
As #gameliela pointed out, it may also be worth trying to find an approach where you don't make your entire row a link, since it will simplify a lot of things. I do, however, think that it can be a good user experience to have an entire table row clickable as a link since it is convenient for the user to be able to click anywhere on a table to navigate to the corresponding page.

Another option using an <a>, CSS positions and some jQuery or JS:
HTML:
<table>
<tr>
<td>
<span>1</span>
</td>
<td><span>2</span></td>
</tr>
</table>
CSS:
table tr td:first-child {
position: relative;
}
a.rowLink {
position: absolute;
top: 0; left: 0;
height: 30px;
}
a.rowLink:hover {
background-color: #0679a6;
opacity: 0.1;
}
Then you need to give the a width, using for example jQuery:
$(function () {
var $table = $('table');
$links = $table.find('a.rowLink');
$(window).resize(function () {
$links.width($table.width());
});
$(window).trigger('resize');
});

The accepted answer is great, but I propose a small alternative if you don't want to repeat the url on every tr.
So you put the url or href in the table data-url and not the tr.
<table data-click data-url="href://blah">
<tbody>
<tr id ="2">
<td>Blah Blah</td> <td>1234567</td> <td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
<tr id ="3">
<td>Blah Blah</td> <td>1234567</td> <td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
$('[data-click] tbody tr').click(function() {
var url = $(this).closest('table').data("url");
var id = $(this).closest('tr').attr('id');
window.location = url+"?id="+id);
});
});
This is also good because you don't need to add the click data attribute to every tr either. The other good thing is that we are not using a class to trigger a click as classes should only really be used for styling.

<tbody>
<tr data-href='www.bbc.co.uk'>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
<tr data-href='www.google.com'>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
<script>
jQuery(document).ready(function ($) {
$('[data-href]').click(function () {
window.location = $(this).data("href");
});
});
</script>
Whilst the main solution on here is great, my solution removes the need for classes. All you need to do is add the data-href attribute with the URL in it.

I've invested a lot of time trying to solve this problem.
There are 3 approaches:
Use JavaScript. The clear drawbacks: it's not possible to open a new tab natively, and when hovering over the row there will be no indication on status bar like regular links have. Accessibility is also a question.
Use HTML/CSS only. This means putting <a> nested under each <td>. A simple approach like this fiddle doesn't work - Because the clickable surface is not necessarily equal for each column. This is a serious UX concern. Also, if you need a <button> on the row, it is not valid HTML to nest it under <a> tag (although browsers are ok with that).
I've found 3 other ways to implement this approach. First is ok, the other two are not great.
a) Have a look on this example:
tr {
height: 0;
}
td {
height: 0;
padding: 0;
}
/* A hack to overcome differences between Chrome and Firefox */
#-moz-document url-prefix() {
td {
height: 100%;
}
}
a {
display: block;
height: 100%;
}
It works, but due to inconsistencies between Chrome and Firefox it requires browser-specific hack to overcome the differences. Also Chrome will always align the cell content to the top, which can cause problems with long texts, especially if varying line heights are involved.
b) Setting <td> to { display: contents; }. This leads to 2 other problems:
b1. If someone else tries to style directly the <td> tag, like setting it to { width: 20px; }, we need to pass that style somehow to the <a> tag. We need some magic to do that, probably more magic than in the Javascript alternative.
b2. { display: contents; } is still experimental; specifically it's not supported on Edge.
c) Setting <td> to { height: --some-fixed-value; }. This is just not flexible enough.
The last approach, which I recommend to seriously thinking of, is to not using clickable rows at all. Clickable rows is not a great UX experience: it's not easy to visually mark them as clickable, and it poses challenges when multiple parts are clickable within the rows, like buttons. So a viable alternative could be to have an <a> tag only on the first column, displayed as a regular link, and give it the role of navigating the whole row.

Here's a generic approach. Define this css:
// css
td a.linker {
color:#212529;
display: block;
padding: 16px;
text-decoration: none;
}
Then place this inside each td:
<td>
<a class="linker" href="www.google.com">
Cell content goes here
</a>
</td>

Here is another way...
The HTML:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr class='clickableRow'>
<td>Blah Blah</td>
<td>1234567</td>
<td>£158,000</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
The jQuery:
$(function() {
$(".clickableRow").on("click", function() {
location.href="http://google.com";
});
});

<table>
<tr tabindex="0" onmousedown="window.location='#';">
<td>1</td>
<td>2</td>
<td>3</td>
</tr>
</table>
Replace # with the url, tabindex="0" makes any element focusable

A 2023 answer:
You can add an addEventListener to the row:
var rows = document.getElementsByTagName('table')[0].rows;
Array.from(rows).forEach(row => {
row.addEventListener("click", function() {
console.log(this.getAttribute('data-href'));
// window.location.href = this.getAttribute('data-href');
});
});
body {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: 20px;
color: #37559d;
}
a {
color: #5165ff;
}
table {
border-collapse: collapse;
}
tr:hover {
background: #f2f3ff;
outline: none;
cursor: pointer;
}
td {
border: 2px solid #ccd2ff;
position: relative;
padding: 18px;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr data-href="https://www.google.com">
<td>One</td>
<td>Two</td>
<td>Three</td>
<td>Four</td>
<td>
Link
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-href="https://www.amazon.com">
<td>One</td>
<td>Two</td>
<td>Three</td>
<td>Four</td>
<td>
Link
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-href="https://www.stackoverflow.com">
<td>One</td>
<td>Two</td>
<td>Three</td>
<td>Four</td>
<td>
Link
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

You could give the row an id, e.g.
<tr id="special"> ... </tr>
and then use jquery to say something like:
$('#special').onclick(function(){ window="http://urltolinkto.com/x/y/z";})

Why should we don't use "div" tags....
<div>
<a href="" > <div> Table row of content here.. </div> </a>
</div>

Related

Selecting a specific row from a table using two text criteria (Playwright, js)

I'm having trouble using potential unique identifiers to select a specific row from a table.
Given the following table
#events {
font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
border-collapse: collapse;
width: 100%;
margin: 10px 0 20px 0;
}
#events td,
#events th {
border: 1px solid #ddd;
padding: 8px;
}
#events tr:nth-child(even) {
background-color: #f2f2f2;
}
#events tr:hover {
background-color: #ddd;
}
#events th {
padding-top: 12px;
padding-bottom: 12px;
text-align: left;
background-color: #04AA6D;
color: white;
}
<div>
<table id="events" class="table table-striped">
<thead>
<tr>
<th data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></th>
<th data-qaid="event">Event</th>
<th data-qaid="date">Date</th>
<th data-qaid="location">Location</th>
<th data-qaid="purchase-date">Ticket Purchased</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></td>
<td data-qaid="event">Movie</td>
<td data-qaid="date">06/06/2022</td>
<td data-qaid="location">Frankfort</td>
<td data-qaid="purchase-date">06/06/2022</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></td>
<td data-qaid="event">Concert</td>
<td data-qaid="date">06/06/2022</td>
<td data-qaid="location">Frankfort</td>
<td data-qaid="purchase-date">06/06/2022</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></td>
<td data-qaid="event">Park</td>
<td data-qaid="date">06/10/2022</td>
<td data-qaid="location">Memphis</td>
<td data-qaid="purchase-date">06/06/2022</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></td>
<td data-qaid="event">Concert</td>
<td data-qaid="date">06/10/2022</td>
<td data-qaid="location">Memphis</td>
<td data-qaid="purchase-date">06/06/2022</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td data-qaid="checkbox"><input type="checkbox" /></td>
<td data-qaid="event">Sport</td>
<td data-qaid="date">06/12/2022</td>
<td data-qaid="location">Atlanta</td>
<td data-qaid="purchase-date">06/06/2022</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div id="change-location">
<label>New Location</label>
<input type="text" />
<button>Update Selected</button>
</div>
Using a playwright Locator, I want to be able to select the row for the Concert on 06/10/2022 and then be able to click the checkbox on that row.
I've been able to do this using a single column locator and selecting the first row encountered (using .nth(#)).
const child_locator = page.locator('[data-qaid="Event"]', { hasText: "Concert" }).nth(0);
const row_locator = page.locator("#events tbody tr", { has: child_locator });
row_locator.locator('[data-qaid="checkbox"] input').setChecked();
But this won't work, since my desired row would not be the first encountered row result.
I'd like to have something more robust / dynamic. And I'm having a hard time figuring out how to do this. I've tried various things like combining locators, using the resultant array of Locators to restrict subsequent searches. I think it comes from my understanding of Playwright locators being as complete as it can be. And I am studying the docs, but haven't figured this out yet.
I think my only real solution may be to get the text of the entire row and just regex on that. But this may have issues with false positives if the text being searched for appears in another column on a row. Such as in the given example, if I wanted to choose the Concert with Date of "06/06/2022", my regex would still select the Concert with Date "06/10/2022" since the Ticket Purchased would also match "06/06/2022"
Well, since you don't have any explicit selectors you can bind to, the only option is to reduce:
You collect all of trs.
You pick trs that have tds of kind Concert
From these, you pick trs that have tds appearing on 06/10/2022
You click on collected element(s)
Here's what I came up with:
/**
* options {{page: Page, search_array: [{column_index: number, needle: string}], tr_selector: Locator}}
*/
static async getRowByValues(options) {
// get the table data
const table_data = await options.page.locator(table_selector).allInnerTexts();
let row_index = table_data.findIndex( (row_text) => {
const text_array = row_text.split("\t");
// loop through the search_array data and match to text_array
for (const col_data of options.search_array) {
// fail immediately if false, continue if true.
if (text_array[col_data.column_index] !== col_data.needle) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
});
if (row_index >= 0) {
return options.page.locator(tr_selector).nth(row_index);
} else {
return null;
}
}
And to use this, one could do:
const desired_row = await getRowByValues({
page: page,
search_array: [
{
column_index: 1,
needle: "Concert"
},
{
column_index: 2,
needle: "06/10/2022"
}
],
tr_selector: page.locator('#events tbody tr')
});
if (desired_row) {
await desired_row.locator('[data-qaid="checkbox"] input').setChecked(true);
await expect(desired_row.locator('[data-qaid="checkbox"] input')).toBeChecked();
}

Hide/show results based on filter

I have a MVC.net web application.
In the view I have a List of records from my database.
The records are displayed in the following format
if (List!=null)
{
<table>
<thead>
<th></th>
</thead>
<tbody>
foreach (item in List)
if (item.startWith("AA"))
{
hide the item originally. and add class to be used by javascript/jquery to show/hide element
}
<td>Item</td>
</tbody>
</table>
}
What i want to do is put a button above the table "Show/hide"
That will hide/show some of the results when clicked.
This is oversimplified skeleton of my code. My actual table has much more information on it.
Mark the items that should be shown/hidden, e.g. with a marker CSS class. You can also set the display CSS property to hide them initially.
#{ const string markerCssClass = "js-hideable"; }
<table>
<thead>
<th></th>
</thead>
<tbody>
foreach (item in List) {
#{ var isHideable = item.StartsWith("AA"); }
<td class="#(isHideable ? markerCssClass : string.Empty)"
style="display: #(isHideable ? "none" : "block")">Item</td>
}
</tbody>
</table>
<button id="show">Show</button>
Then use jquery to show/hide these items using the marker class as selector.
<script type="text/javascript">
$('#show').on('click', function() {
var affectedElements = $('.#markerCssClass');
affectedElements.show();
});
</script>
You can do the filtering with pure CSS if you put the button BEFORE the table and either at the same level or higher.
<html>
<head>
<style>
#filter-toggle:checked ~ .filterable-table .filterable { display: none; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<input id="filter-toggle" type="checkbox">
<label for="filter-toggle"> Filter</label>
<table class="filterable-table">
<tr class="filterable"><td>Hide me when filtered</td></tr>
<tr><td>Show me when filtered</td></tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>

How to Use/ Display a Asp.net DataList in MVC Razor View

I have this list below, which I am generating on the fly using Razor view:
<table id="contractCoverablesGrid">
<tbody>
#foreach (var coverableItem in Model.ContractCoverablesList)
{
<tr>
<td>
#Html.Hidden("coverID",coverableItem.CoverID)
</td>
<td>
#Html.Label(coverableItem.Name)
</td>
<td>
<input type='checkbox' class='chkboxActive' checked='checked' />
</td>
</tr>
}
</tbody>
</table>
As you can imagine the outcome of this is a vertical list, which keeps extending downwards.
I would like to have this list 'wrapped' into three adjacent columns instead of one single long column; just as you would do this in ASP.net Datalist server control (in Webforms).
My initial thoughts were to limit the width & height of the table to set values and then keep floating the td(s) left. But how do I float a td. I cannot turn this into div.
Any thoughts?
Please let me know.
You might try a for instead of foreach. You would loop through the list divided by 3 and start a new td each time.
This is how I resolved it:
<table id="contractCoverablesGrid" width="600" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
#foreach (var coverableItem in Model.ContractCoverablesList)
{
<td>
<div id="dataListItem">
#Html.Hidden("coverableID", coverableItem.CoverID)
#Html.Label(coverableItem.Name)
<input type='checkbox' name="coverableItemCheckBox" id="coverableItemCheckBox" />
</div>
</td>
}
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<style>
#dataListItem {
float: left;
font-weight: normal;
}
</style>

Strange highlight Mobile Safari

I have some problem with the highlight.
This is my CSS code:
html {
-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0,0,0,0.7);
-webkit-touch-callout: none;
}
This is my HTML code:
<a href="javascript: location.href = 'level://?id=123456';">
<div class="Box" id="Box0">
<table class="BoldText" style="margin:8px;">
<tr>
<td valign="top" width="50">
<div class="ProfileImage">
<div style="background:url(<url>) top left no-repeat;"></div>
</div>
</td>
<td>gustaf98 published a level
<div style="width:220px; margin-top:4px;" class="lightText">Skiftnyckel</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</div>
</a>
And this is the result when I touch the box on my iPhone in a UIWebView:
And my question are, how can I get the black highlight over the whole box?
Please help!
You have this applied to the entire HTML rather than a specific container according to your CSS. Do you have a working example of this, or a link?
Try applying it specifically to the box that you want to be highlighted.
For example...
.box {
-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0,0,0,0.7);
-webkit-touch-callout: none;
}

ASP.NET MVC Razor engine show three data in each row?

In the ASP.NET MVC Razor engine I want to show three data entries in each row so I write this:
<table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="22" cellpadding="0" style="line-height:18px;">
<tr>
<td align="center" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr>
#{
int counter = 0;
foreach (MVCTaranehMah.Models.Folder item in ViewBag.items)
{
counter++;
if(counter%3 == 0)
{
<tr>
}
<td width="205" height="180" align="center" valign="top"><br />
<p align="center" valign="top" class="header3">#item.title</p>
</td>
#if(counter%3 == 0)
{
</tr>
}
}
}
</tr>
</table>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
But I get this error
The code block is missing a closing "}" character. Make sure you have a matching "}" character for all the "{" characters within this block, and that none of the "}" characters are being interpreted as markup.
What's the problem and how can I do something like this?
I think the code does not like that you seemingly have unclosed HTML tags.
Place before the tr, #:
Remove # from the front of the other if statement.
For example:
if (counter%3 == 0)
{
#:<tr>
}
Rather than trying to force the list into a table, you could just render it as a list:
<ul class="thumbs">
#foreach (var item in ViewBag.Items)
{
<li>
<a href="galleryDetails?id=#item.id">
<img src="#Url.Content(item.thumb)">
#item.title
</a>
</li>
}
</ul>
Styling the list to display with three items per row is trivial. Start here, and tweak it as needed:
ul.thumbs {
overflow: hidden;
}
ul.thumbs li {
float: left;
width: 205px;
height: 180px;
margin: 22px;
text-align: center;
}
ul.thumbs img {
width: 173px;
height: 173px;
border: 0;
}

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