I'm just starting to use Christian Bach's excellent TableSorter plugin, and I need to get a column's current sort direction. I have several columns:

  • ID
  • Name
  • Category

ID and Name are set to non-sortable using

headers:    { 0: {sorter: false}, 1: {sorter: false} }

I'm adding a click handler on Name so that it fires the sort event on the Category column. Using the example "Sort table using a link outside the table", I'm able to get the Name header to fire the Category sort -- but it's hard-coded to sort in one direction.

How can I get it to look at the current direction the Category column is currently sorted, and sort in the opposite direction? (I can handle flipping the values; since the sort order is 0 or 1, I can XOR the value to get the opposite, like var sort; sort ^= sort; -- my question is how to get the current value.

Here's the code that currently sets the click handler on the Name column:

$("#nameCol").click(function() {
    var sorting = [[2, 0]];     /* sort 3rd col (Category) descending */
    $("#SearchResults").trigger("sorton", [sorting] );  /* SearchResults is the ID of the sortable table */
    return false;               /* cancel default link action on a#nameCol */
});

Thanks!

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2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

The table headers should all call the same click event:

$('th').click(function() {
     handleHeaderClick(this);
});  

Then click handler should add/remove the applicable classes.

function handleHeaderClick(hdr) {
if ($(hdr).hasClass('headerSortDown') == true) {
	$(hdr).removeClass('headerSortDown');
	$(hdr).addClass('headerSortUp');
} else if ($(hdr).hasClass('headerSortUp') == true) {
	$(hdr).removeClass('headerSortUp');
	$(hdr).addClass('headerSortDown');
} else {
	$('th', myTable).removeClass('headerSortUp headerSortDown');
	$(hdr).addClass('headerSortDown');
}
doSomething();

};

I hope this helps.

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d'oh, of course! I was focused on getting state thru some API call, but it's expressed in the class attribute... just test that. Very RESTy. Thanks! – Val Dec 27 '09 at 7:36
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I wrote a function to save the current sort order. This helped me out in a situation where the table was being rebuilt from scratch.

function SaveSortOrder(tablename) {
//returns an array of a tablesorter sort order
var hdrorder = new Array();
var hdrs = $("#" + tablename + " th");
var arrayindex = 0;
hdrs.each(function (index) {
    if ($(this).hasClass('headerSortDown')) {
        hdrorder[arrayindex] = [index, 0];
        arrayindex++;
    }
    else if ($(this).hasClass('headerSortUp')) {
        hdrorder[arrayindex] = [index, 1];
        arrayindex++;
    }       
});

return hdrorder;
}
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