First, I'm pretty sure that you can access this <i>
icon tag with css, because the fact that some element will get created dynamically does not preventing it to be affected by your css.
Sure your css could get overridden because of Vuetify css, according to the rules of specificity. I would suggest beginning with add a class
property to the <v-data-table>
, to allow you to specify the css for the tag something like that:
.my-datatable-class .datatable thead th.column.sortable i {
display: none;
}
It's different if you are using scoped style, this, and more about css specificity is covered here, thanks @Traxo
Anoter option is to implement the whole header section of the data-table by yourself, which is allowed by Vuetify using scoped-slots example of how to do it is in the examples, look for the Slot: items and headers and there at the template code you can see the <v-icon small>arrow_upward</v-icon>
thing, just implement the headers omitting that, and there you go without css, adding something like that into your <v-data-table>
:
<template slot="headers" slot-scope="props">
<tr>
<th
v-for="header in props.headers"
:key="header.text"
:class="['column sortable', pagination.descending ? 'desc' : 'asc', header.value === pagination.sortBy ? 'active' : '']"
@click="changeSort(header.value)"
>
{{ header.text }}
</th>
</tr>
</template>
sortable: false
to yourheaders
items :headers: [ { text: 'ID', value: 'Id', sortable: false }, . . . ]
however I am unable to access the i tag or the class v-icon via css in the code. Probably because it is not created before the rendering process.
, this indicates to me that they know how to actually target it via CSS, but something is not working. And even if they aren't using scoped styles, other things such as specificity are covered. That should be enough to properly target any element. If something is not clear or covered, feedback is welcome (there).