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Quickly Create React Data Tables with Material DesignWant to use Mantine instead of Material UI? Check out Mantine React Table
View additional storybook examples
All features can easily be enabled/disabled
Fully Fleshed out Docs are available for all features
View the full Installation Docs
Ensure that you have React 18 or later installed
Install Peer Dependencies (Material UI V6)
npm install @mui/material @mui/x-date-pickers @mui/icons-material @emotion/react @emotion/styled
npm install material-react-table
@tanstack/react-table
,@tanstack/react-virtual
, and@tanstack/match-sorter-utils
are internal dependencies, so you do NOT need to install them yourself.
Read the full usage docs here
import { useMemo, useState, useEffect } from 'react'; import { MaterialReactTable, useMaterialReactTable, } from 'material-react-table'; //data must be stable reference (useState, useMemo, useQuery, defined outside of component, etc.) const data = [ { name: 'John', age: 30, }, { name: 'Sara', age: 25, }, ]; export default function App() { const columns = useMemo( () => [ { accessorKey: 'name', //simple recommended way to define a column header: 'Name', muiTableHeadCellProps: { sx: { color: 'green' } }, //optional custom props Cell: ({ cell }) => <span>{cell.getValue()}</span>, //optional custom cell render }, { accessorFn: (row) => row.age, //alternate way id: 'age', //id required if you use accessorFn instead of accessorKey header: 'Age', Header: () => <i>Age</i>, //optional custom header render }, ], [], ); //optionally, you can manage any/all of the table state yourself const [rowSelection, setRowSelection] = useState({}); useEffect(() => { //do something when the row selection changes }, [rowSelection]); const table = useMaterialReactTable({ columns, data, enableColumnOrdering: true, //enable some features enableRowSelection: true, enablePagination: false, //disable a default feature onRowSelectionChange: setRowSelection, //hoist internal state to your own state (optional) state: { rowSelection }, //manage your own state, pass it back to the table (optional) }); const someEventHandler = () => { //read the table state during an event from the table instance console.log(table.getState().sorting); }; return ( <MaterialReactTable table={table} /> //other more lightweight MRT sub components also available ); }
Open in Code Sandbox
PRs are Welcome, but please discuss in GitHub Discussions or the Discord Server first if it is a large change!
Read the Contributing Guide to learn how to run this project locally.
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