22

I am trying to filter Array data based on multiple columns using only one Pipe. Right now, It filters first column value. Please check my below code and help me to sort this out.

My Code:

@Pipe({ name: "dataFilter", pure: false })
export class DataFilterPipe implements PipeTransform {
    transform(value: Array<any>, filter: any[]) {
        if (!filter) {
            return value;
        } else if (value) {
            return value.filter(item => {
                for (var i = 0; i < filter.length; i++) {
                    if (filter[i][1] == undefined) {
                        return true;
                    } else if ((typeof item[filter[i][0]] === 'string' || item[filter[i][0]] instanceof String) &&
                        (item[filter[i][0]].toLowerCase().indexOf(filter[i][1]) !== -1)) {
                        return true;
                    }
                    return false;
                }
            });
        }
    }
}

I am passing data like dataFilter : [['column1',value1],['column2',value2],['column3',value3]].

1
  • Could you provide an example value? Is it on the form: [{col1:"col1",col2:"col2",col3:"col3"},...,{}]?
    – John
    Jan 19, 2017 at 9:31

6 Answers 6

31
+50

Here is a solution using the object passed as multiple columns filter. I found it more convenient then passing a 2D array:

    @Pipe({
        name: 'filter'
    })
    export class FilterPipe implements PipeTransform {
        transform(items: Array<any>, filter: {[key: string]: any }): Array<any> {
            return items.filter(item => {
                const notMatchingField = Object.keys(filter)
                                             .find(key => item[key] !== filter[key]);

                return !notMatchingField; // true if matches all fields
            });
        }
    }

Having an array of objects with multiple columns:

this.people = [
  {name: 'John', age: 27, sex: 'male'},
  {name: 'Lara', age: 21, sex: 'female'},
  {name: 'Rick', age: 29, sex: 'male'},
  {name: 'Eva',  age: 27, sex: 'female'},
  {name: 'Mike', age: 27, sex: 'male'}
];

And a filter:

this.peopleFilter = {age: 27, sex: 'male'};

Use it like:

 <div *ngFor="let person of people | filter: peopleFilter;"></div>

As a result, two people are matching our criteria: John and Mike.

Here is the working plunker: Multiple columns filter pipe demo.

6
  • When I am using it, It does not show any data and even I don't get any data when i input value. Jan 25, 2017 at 11:56
  • Here is the working plunker: plnkr.co/edit/e0PCIsqXumbXe6mAUWBI?p=preview
    – seidme
    Jan 25, 2017 at 13:38
  • Thanks. I am marking your post as answer but what if there is no value (then it should return all values) or value is number in anyone input ? Jan 26, 2017 at 10:29
  • Thanks! If no value is provided, say our filter is {}, then all items will be returned, otherwise it matches the exact value provided, which is fine because, for example, there might be a situation where we want to filter columns with null or undefined field. Ofc, this is a concept, and the solution may be adjusted suiting the situation.
    – seidme
    Jan 26, 2017 at 11:00
  • Thanks @SeidMehmedovic. Adjusted to filter multiple values for the same key. Plunker link - plnkr.co/edit/bUeQHzWhDp1qnrvj3tl4
    – azy777
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:54
6

Here is what I did with Angular 8:

Goal: Search on multiple properties say "Property1" and "Property2" from a list of items for a given keyword:

app.module.ts:

......
import { MyFilterPipe } from './shared/pipes/my-filter.pipe';

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    ...
    MyFilterPipe
  ],
  imports: [
    ...
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

Pipe: content-filter.pipe.ts

import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';

@Pipe({
  name: 'myFilter'
})
export class MyFilterPipe implements PipeTransform {

  transform(items: any[], keyword: any, properties: string[]): any[] {
    if (!items) return [];
    if (!keyword) return items;
    debugger;
    return items.filter(item => {
      var itemFound: Boolean;
      for (let i = 0; i < properties.length; i++) {
        if (item[properties[i]].toLowerCase().indexOf(keyword.toLowerCase()) !== -1) {
          itemFound = true;
          break;
        }
      }
      return itemFound;
    });

  }
}

component:

<input type="search" class="form-control filter-list-input" placeholder="Filter"
                  aria-label="Filter" name="search" [(ngModel)]="searchText" >

    <div *ngFor="let itemof myItems | myFilter:searchText:['Property1', 'Property2']; let i = index">...
</div>

component.ts:

export class MyListComponent implements OnInit {

  ...
  searchText: string;
1

Replace Your code as below,

 export class DataFilterPipe implements PipeTransform {
   transform(value: Item[], field: string, args: string): Item[]{
      let filter: string = args ? args.toLocaleLowerCase() : null;
      return filter ? value.filter((item : Item) =>
          Item[field].toLocaleLowerCase().indexOf(filter) != -1) : value;
   }
}

In Html page,

 <tbody *ngFor="let item of items | dataFilter : columnName : value ">
3
  • This is just for one filter parameter. I need it for multiple parameters. Jan 16, 2017 at 9:49
  • what you are exactly trying to do? Filter with single filter parameter on multiple columns or with multiple filter parameters on single column?Please, Clear it.
    – Trusha
    Jan 16, 2017 at 10:03
  • 1
    Multiple filter on multiple columns. I am passing data in array like [['column1',value1],['column2',value2],['column3',value3]]. Jan 16, 2017 at 10:07
1

I am assuming that you have an array with columns like this:

[{col1:"col1",col2:"col2",col3:"col3"}]

I have also omitted all type-checkin, null-pointers, and error-handling. The current solution is an example I tried with the array:

myData:Array<any> = [{col1:"a",col2:"b",col3:"cadd"},
    {col1:"abba",col2:"bobba",col3:"cadd"},
    {col1:"abba",col2:"bobba",col3:"cool"},
    {col1:"a",col2:"bobba",col3:"cool"}];

and the pipe:

@Pipe({
  name: 'dataFilter'
})
export class DataFilterPipe implements PipeTransform {

  transform(value: any, args?: any): any {
    return value.filter(item =>{
      var matchesAll = true;
      for(var i = 0; i<args.length; i++){
        // check if your data contains the column and the value defined in args.
        if(item.hasOwnProperty(args[i][0]) && item[args[i][0]]==args[i][1]){
          continue;
        }else{ // at least one column did not match,
          matchesAll = false;
        }
      }
      return matchesAll;
    });
  }

}

You can then call

dataFilter.transform(myData,[["col1","abba"],["col2","bobba"],["col3","cool"]]);

in order to get one result, which is row number 3 after transformation: [{col1:"abba",col2:"bobba",col3:"cool"}].

Note: You may have to adjust the names of the columns in my example to make it work with your code.

EDIT: With this solution, you can also pass arbitrary number of columns.

e.g dataFilter.transform(myData,[["col3","cool"]]);

which will result in the two last rows (from my example) after transformation:

[{col1:"abba",col2:"bobba",col3:"cool"},{col1:"a",col2:"bobba",col3:"cool"}]

EDIT: after comment stating that the code is not working, I provided a plunkr of the example above: https://plnkr.co/edit/VdpGJWyzWUVFzYNDSz1g

1
0

You can see the whole working ArrayFilterPipe.ts @ http://typescript.io/uN29xRdF1Ag or typescriptlang.org
Also below I have attached the compile JS of the typescript for ease of seeing your desired output. Let me know if want the code commented ...

FYI options array is cnverted to object before performing the filter, as it feels a lot comfortable that the array.

/* yours */
var option = [['column1',value1],['column2',value2],['column3',value3]];
/* mine */
var option = { column1: 'value1', column2: 'value2', column3: 'value3' };

static _arrayToObject(value: Array<Array<any>>): any {
    return (ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(value) || value == null) 
    ? value 
    : value.reduce((result, current) => {   
                    result[current[0]] = current[1]; 
                    return result; 
                } , {});
}

You can also build the array/object filter similar to angular 1.x by getting some inspiration from https://github.com/angular/angular.js/blob/master/src/ng/filter/filter.js

var ArrayFilterPipe = (function () {
    function ArrayFilterPipe() {
    }
    ArrayFilterPipe._isOfType = function (value, type) {
        return typeof (value) === type;
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined = function (value) {
        return ArrayFilterPipe._isOfType(value, ArrayFilterPipe.TYPES.UNDEFINED);
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe._isObject = function (value) {
        return ArrayFilterPipe._isOfType(value, ArrayFilterPipe.TYPES.OBJECT);
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe._isOrHasMatch = function (value, target) {
        return ArrayFilterPipe._isOfType(value, ArrayFilterPipe.TYPES.STRING) || ArrayFilterPipe._isOfType(target, ArrayFilterPipe.TYPES.STRING)
            ? value.toString().toLowerCase().indexOf(target.toString().toLowerCase()) >= 0
            : value == target;
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe._hasOptions = function (value, options) {
        return (ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(value) || ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(options) ? (ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(value) && ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(options))
            : (value === null || options == null) ? (value === null && options == null)
                : (Array.isArray(value) || Array.isArray(options)) ? false
                    : ArrayFilterPipe._isObject(value) ?
                        (ArrayFilterPipe._isObject(options)
                            ? Object.keys(options).every(function (key) { return value.hasOwnProperty(key) && ArrayFilterPipe._isOrHasMatch(value[key], options[key]); })
                            : Object.values(value).some(function (val) { return ArrayFilterPipe._isOrHasMatch(val, options); }))
                        : !ArrayFilterPipe._isObject(value) ?
                            (!ArrayFilterPipe._isObject(options)
                                ? ArrayFilterPipe._isOrHasMatch(value, options)
                                : false)
                            : false);
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe._arrayToObject = function (value) {
        return (ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(value) || value == null) ? value : value.reduce(function (result, current) {
            result[current[0]] = current[1];
            return result;
        }, {});
    };
    ArrayFilterPipe.prototype.transform = function (value, options) {
        if (!value || !Array.isArray(value) || ArrayFilterPipe._isUndefined(options) || options === null) {
            return value;
        }
        options = Array.isArray(options) ? ArrayFilterPipe._arrayToObject(options) : options;
        return value.filter(function (item) { return ArrayFilterPipe._hasOptions(item, options); });
    };
    return ArrayFilterPipe;
}());
ArrayFilterPipe.TYPES = {
    OBJECT: 'object',
    STRING: 'string',
    UNDEFINED: 'undefined'
};
/*
    TESTING
    --------------------------------------------------
*/
var pipe = new ArrayFilterPipe();
var array = [null, undefined, , true, 123123, 'Jeke HeNry', 'joe', 'joe hen', {}, [], { fake: 'hen' }, { name: 'hen' }, { name: 'johenrik', country: 'hen' }, { name: 'joe dick', city: 'hen' }, { name: 'Jeke HeNry', country: 'zxy' }];
var options = null;
/* REF:  http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11403107/capturing-javascript-console-log */
var oldLog = console.log;
console.log = function (message) {
    var _arguments = arguments;
    var div = Object.keys(arguments).map(function (key) { return Number(key); }).reduce(function (result, key) {
        result = result || document.createElement('div');
        var isJSON = (_arguments[key] != null && (typeof (_arguments[key]) === 'object' || Array.isArray(_arguments[key])));
        var span = document.createElement(isJSON ? 'pre' : 'span');
        span.innerHTML = isJSON ? JSON.stringify(_arguments[key], undefined) : _arguments[key].replace('\n', '</br></br>');
        result.appendChild(span);
        return result;
    }, null);
    document.body.appendChild(div);
    oldLog.apply(console, arguments);
};
function test() {
    console.log('options', options);
    console.log('result', pipe.transform(array, options));
}
console.log('case : 01');
console.log('---------------------------------------------------');
options = 'hen';
test();
console.log('\ncase : 02');
console.log('---------------------------------------------------');
options = { name: 'hen' };
test();
options = [['name', 'hen']];
test();
console.log('\ncase : 03');
console.log('---------------------------------------------------');
options = { name: 'hen', country: 'hen' };
test();
options = [['name', 'hen'], ['country', 'hen']];
test();
console.log('\ncase : 04');
console.log('---------------------------------------------------');
options = { name: 'hen', city: 'hen', fake: true };
test();
options = [['name', 'hen'], ['country', 'hen'], ['fake', true]];
test();

0

I had to have a Pipe that could filter by both a specific property value AND a generic value called "All". A user could adjust these filters dynamically by selecting them from a dropdown (thus the use of the more inefficient pure: false config).

In the component (had to default to 'All')

public filters = { status: "All", condition: "All", other: "All" };

In the template

<div *ngFor="let item of items | filter:filters">
@Pipe({
  name: 'filter',
  pure: false
})
export class FilterPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(items: Array<any>, filter: {[key: string]: any }): Array<any> {
    return items.filter(item => {
      let matches = Object.keys(filter).every(f => {
        return filter[f] === 'All' || item[f] == filter[f];
      })

      return matches;
    })
  }
}

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