8

I'm using Datatables to display some data. I also have inputs that are used to add a new row to the data. When I add this row, I reinitialise the table, and it automatically sorts the new row according to the sorting rules I give it. My question is this: Is there a way to get the data from the table in the order it's currently being viewed? Whenever I try $('#tableCompetitors').dataTable().fnGetData(), it gives me the data in the order it was added to the table not the ordered it's being presented in.

So is there an easy way to do what I want?

P.S. If it helps. The original datasource is an array of arrays that is provided from a textbox. I parse it, push it to an array, then use that array as the datasource.

2
  • if you save sort state would it matter what order data source is in?
    – charlietfl
    Feb 12, 2013 at 1:49
  • What do you mean by save sort state? I need the data after it's sorted so I can create a document structure based on the sorted data.
    – Frank B
    Feb 12, 2013 at 1:53

3 Answers 3

10

I came across this with the same question. While the accepted solution may work, I found a better way:

$("example").DataTable().rows({search:'applied'}).data()

See selector-modifier documentation for more information.

8

Here is one solution using 3 of the API callbacks.

  1. Create variable for CurrentData
  2. Reset CurrentData to empty array within fnPreDrawCallback which fires before the new table is rendered
  3. fnRowCallback gives access to array of data for each row, push that array into CurrentData array
  4. fnDrawCallback fires after table rendered, can now access sorted data in CurrentData array

JS

  var currData = [];
  $('#example').dataTable({
    "fnPreDrawCallback": function(oSettings) {
        /* reset currData before each draw*/
        currData = [];
    },
    "fnRowCallback": function(nRow, aData, iDisplayIndex, iDisplayIndexFull) {
        /* push this row of data to currData array*/
        currData.push(aData);

    },
    "fnDrawCallback": function(oSettings) {
        /* can now access sorted data array*/
        console.log(currData)
    }
});

DEMO: http://jsfiddle.net/ne24B/

1
  • This works. I'm going to wait and see if there are any other solutions offered before I accept it though. Thanks!
    – Frank B
    Feb 12, 2013 at 3:28
2

Just trying to give you another option.

The following will get all the rows in the table, even if they are filtered out:

var currData = [];
var oTable = $('#example').dataTable();

oTable.$("tr").each(function(index, row){
    //generate your array here
    // like $(row).children().eq(0) for the first table column
    currData.push($(row).children().eq(0));
    // return the data in the first column
    currData.push($(row).children().eq(0).text());
});

or if you just want the results that match the filter then:

var currData = [];
var oTable = $('#example').dataTable();

oTable.$("tr", {"filter":"applied"}).each(function(index, row){
    //generate your array here
    // like $(row).children().eq(0) for the first table column
    currData.push($(row).children().eq(0));

    // return the data in the first column
    currData.push($(row).children().eq(0).text());
});

currData will contain the sorted list of the first column data.

Edit: To get the entire row's text into the array.

$(row + " td").each(function(index, tdData){
    currData.push($(tdData).text());
});

or

$(row).children().each(function(index, tdData){
    currData.push($(tdData).text());
});

This way you have a little more control on what the array can contain. My 2 cents.

5
  • What does the the $(row).children().eq(0) return exactly? Is it an array containing the row data? I'd try it myself and find out, but I'm away from my development machine right now.
    – Frank B
    Feb 13, 2013 at 20:55
  • It returns the first column. If you want the data in the column you could $(row).children().eq(0).text()
    – Bret
    Feb 16, 2013 at 14:07
  • I want the entire row as an array. Can I just do `$(row).text(), or some other similar voodoo? This code looks a bit cleaner so I'm tempted to explore it.
    – Frank B
    Feb 19, 2013 at 21:17
  • $(row + " td").each(function(index, tdData){ currData.push($(tdData).text()); });
    – Bret
    Feb 20, 2013 at 16:17
  • or $(row).children().each(function(index, tdData){ currData.push($(tdData).text()); });
    – Bret
    Feb 20, 2013 at 16:20

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