View Source Kino.DataTable (Kino v0.13.1)

A kino for interactively viewing tabular data.

Examples

data = [
  %{id: 1, name: "Elixir", website: "https://elixir-lang.org"},
  %{id: 2, name: "Erlang", website: "https://www.erlang.org"}
]

Kino.DataTable.new(data)

The tabular view allows you to quickly preview the data and analyze it thanks to sorting capabilities.

data =
  for pid <- Process.list() do
    pid |> Process.info() |> Keyword.merge(registered_name: nil)
  end

Kino.DataTable.new(
  data,
  keys: [:registered_name, :initial_call, :reductions, :stack_size]
)

Summary

Functions

Creates a new kino displaying given tabular data.

Updates the table to display a new tabular data.

Types

Functions

Link to this function

new(tabular, opts \\ [])

View Source
@spec new(
  Table.Reader.t(),
  keyword()
) :: t()

Creates a new kino displaying given tabular data.

Options

  • :keys - a list of keys to include in the table for each record. The order is reflected in the rendered table. Optional

  • :name - The displayed name of the table. Defaults to "Data"

  • :sorting_enabled - whether the table should support sorting the data. Sorting requires traversal of the whole enumerable, so it may not be desirable for large lazy enumerables. Defaults to true

  • :formatter - a 2-arity function that is used to format the data in the table. The first parameter passed is the key (column name) and the second is the value to be formatted. When formatting column headings the key is the special value :__header__. The formatter function must return either {:ok, string} or :default. When the return value is :default the default data table formatting is applied.

Link to this function

update(kino, tabular, opts \\ [])

View Source

Updates the table to display a new tabular data.

Options

  • :keys - a list of keys to include in the table for each record. The order is reflected in the rendered table. Optional

Examples

data = [
  %{id: 1, name: "Elixir", website: "https://elixir-lang.org"},
  %{id: 2, name: "Erlang", website: "https://www.erlang.org"}
]

kino = Kino.DataTable.new(data)

Once created, you can update the table to display new data:

new_data = [
  %{id: 1, name: "Elixir Lang", website: "https://elixir-lang.org"},
  %{id: 2, name: "Erlang Lang", website: "https://www.erlang.org"}
]

Kino.DataTable.update(kino, new_data)