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    Async Loading UI Feature Guide

    While you are fetching your data, you may want to show some loading indicators. Material React Table has some nice loading UI features built in that look better than a simple spinner.

    This guide is mostly focused on the loading UI features. Make sure to also check out the Remote Data and React Query examples for server-side logic examples.

    Relevant Table Options

    1
    CircularProgressProps | ({ table }) => CircularProgressProps
    Material UI CircularProgress Props
    2
    LinearProgressProps | ({ isTopToolbar, table }) => LinearProgressProps
    Material UI LinearProgress Props
    3
    SkeletonProps | ({ cell, column, row, table }) => SkeletonProps
    Material UI Skeleton Props

    Relevant State Options

    1
    boolean
    false
    2
    boolean
    false
    3
    boolean
    false
    4
    boolean
    false
    5
    boolean
    false

    isLoading UI

    There are three different loading UI features that are built into Material React Table:

    1. Loading Overlay - shows spinner overlay over the table container.

    2. Cell Skeletons - show pretty and shimmering skeletons for each cell.

    3. Linear Progress Bars - shows progress bars above and/or below the table.

    You can use any combination of these loading UIs by managing the showLoadingOverlay, showSkeletons, and showProgressBars states.

    There are also two other loading states that are shortcuts for combining some of the above states:

    • isLoading - shows loading overlay and cell skeletons.

    • isSaving - shows the progress bars and adds spinners to the save buttons in editing features.

    Here is some of the recommended loading UI that you might use with React Query:

    const {
    data = [],
    isLoading: isLoadingTodos,
    isRefetching: isRefetchingTodos,
    } = useQuery({
    /**/
    });
    const { mutate, isPending: isSavingTodos } = useMutation({
    /**/
    });
    const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    columns,
    data,
    state: {
    isLoading: isLoadingTodos, //cell skeletons and loading overlay
    showProgressBars: isRefetchingTodos, //progress bars while refetching
    isSaving: isSavingTodos, //progress bars and save button spinners
    },
    });
    return <MaterialReactTable table={table} />;

    Note: The Loading Overlay UI makes the table container non-interactive while it is showing. This is usually desired while no data is yet in the table. Consider avoiding using the Loading Overlay UI during "refetching" operations like filtering, sorting, or pagination.

    Customize Loading UI

    You can customize the loading UI by passing props to the muiSkeletonProps, muiLinearProgressProps, and muiCircularProgressProps props.

    const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    columns,
    data,
    muiSkeletonProps: {
    animation: 'wave',
    },
    muiLinearProgressProps: {
    color: 'secondary',
    },
    muiCircularProgressProps: {
    color: 'secondary',
    },
    });
    return <MaterialReactTable table={table} />;

    Demo

    Open StackblitzOpen Code SandboxOpen on GitHub
    1-10 of 10

    Source Code

    1import { useMemo } from 'react';
    2import { MaterialReactTable, type MRT_ColumnDef } from 'material-react-table';
    3import { type Person } from './makeData';
    4
    5const data: Array<Person> = [];
    6
    7const Example = () => {
    8 const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<Person>[]>(
    9 //column definitions...
    30 );
    31
    32 return (
    33 <MaterialReactTable
    34 columns={columns}
    35 data={data}
    36 state={{ isLoading: true }}
    37 muiCircularProgressProps={{
    38 color: 'secondary',
    39 thickness: 5,
    40 size: 55,
    41 }}
    42 muiSkeletonProps={{
    43 animation: 'pulse',
    44 height: 28,
    45 }}
    46 />
    47 );
    48};
    49
    50export default Example;
    51

    Custom Loading Spinner component

    New in v2.11.0

    If you need to use a custom loading spinner component other than the built-in MUI one, you can now pass in custom component in the muiCircularProgressProps Component prop.

    import { MyCustomSpinner } from './MyCustomSpinner';
    const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    columns,
    data,
    muiCircularProgressProps: {
    Component: <MyCustomSpinner />,
    },
    });

    Only Show Progress Bars or Skeletons

    If you do not want both progress bars and cell skeletons to show, you can use the showProgressBars and showSkeletons states, instead.

    const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    columns,
    data,
    state: {
    showProgressBars: true, //or showSkeletons
    },
    });

    Demo

    DylanMurraydmurray@yopmail.comEast Daphne
    RaquelKohlerrkholer33@yopmail.comColumbus
    ErvinReingerereinger@mailinator.comSouth Linda
    BrittanyMcCulloughbmccullough44@mailinator.comLincoln
    BransonFramibframi@yopmain.comNew York
    KevinKleinkklien@mailinator.comNebraska
    1-6 of 6

    Source Code

    1import { useEffect, useMemo, useState } from 'react';
    2import { MaterialReactTable, type MRT_ColumnDef } from 'material-react-table';
    3import { data, type Person } from './makeData';
    4import { Button } from '@mui/material';
    5
    6const Example = () => {
    7 const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<Person>[]>(
    8 //column definitions...
    29 );
    30
    31 const [progress, setProgress] = useState(0);
    32
    33 //simulate random progress for demo purposes
    34 useEffect(() => {
    35 const interval = setInterval(() => {
    36 setProgress((oldProgress) => {
    37 const newProgress = Math.random() * 20;
    38 return Math.min(oldProgress + newProgress, 100);
    39 });
    40 }, 1000);
    41 return () => clearInterval(interval);
    42 }, []);
    43
    44 return (
    45 <MaterialReactTable
    46 columns={columns}
    47 data={data}
    48 muiLinearProgressProps={({ isTopToolbar }) => ({
    49 color: 'secondary',
    50 variant: 'determinate', //if you want to show exact progress value
    51 value: progress, //value between 0 and 100
    52 sx: {
    53 display: isTopToolbar ? 'block' : 'none', //hide bottom progress bar
    54 },
    55 })}
    56 renderTopToolbarCustomActions={() => (
    57 <Button onClick={() => setProgress(0)} variant="contained">
    58 Reset
    59 </Button>
    60 )}
    61 state={{ showProgressBars: true }}
    62 />
    63 );
    64};
    65
    66export default Example;
    67

    Full Loading and Server-Side Logic Example

    Here is a copy of the full React Query example.

    Demo

    0-0 of 0

    Source Code

    1import { useMemo, useState } from 'react';
    2import {
    3 MaterialReactTable,
    4 useMaterialReactTable,
    5 type MRT_ColumnDef,
    6 type MRT_ColumnFiltersState,
    7 type MRT_PaginationState,
    8 type MRT_SortingState,
    9} from 'material-react-table';
    10import { IconButton, Tooltip } from '@mui/material';
    11import RefreshIcon from '@mui/icons-material/Refresh';
    12import {
    13 QueryClient,
    14 QueryClientProvider,
    15 keepPreviousData,
    16 useQuery,
    17} from '@tanstack/react-query'; //note: this is TanStack React Query V5
    18
    19//Your API response shape will probably be different. Knowing a total row count is important though.
    20type UserApiResponse = {
    21 data: Array<User>;
    22 meta: {
    23 totalRowCount: number;
    24 };
    25};
    26
    27type User = {
    28 firstName: string;
    29 lastName: string;
    30 address: string;
    31 state: string;
    32 phoneNumber: string;
    33 lastLogin: Date;
    34};
    35
    36const Example = () => {
    37 //manage our own state for stuff we want to pass to the API
    38 const [columnFilters, setColumnFilters] = useState<MRT_ColumnFiltersState>(
    39 [],
    40 );
    41 const [globalFilter, setGlobalFilter] = useState('');
    42 const [sorting, setSorting] = useState<MRT_SortingState>([]);
    43 const [pagination, setPagination] = useState<MRT_PaginationState>({
    44 pageIndex: 0,
    45 pageSize: 10,
    46 });
    47
    48 //consider storing this code in a custom hook (i.e useFetchUsers)
    49 const {
    50 data: { data = [], meta } = {}, //your data and api response will probably be different
    51 isError,
    52 isRefetching,
    53 isLoading,
    54 refetch,
    55 } = useQuery<UserApiResponse>({
    56 queryKey: [
    57 'table-data',
    58 columnFilters, //refetch when columnFilters changes
    59 globalFilter, //refetch when globalFilter changes
    60 pagination.pageIndex, //refetch when pagination.pageIndex changes
    61 pagination.pageSize, //refetch when pagination.pageSize changes
    62 sorting, //refetch when sorting changes
    63 ],
    64 queryFn: async () => {
    65 const fetchURL = new URL('/api/data', location.origin);
    66
    67 //read our state and pass it to the API as query params
    68 fetchURL.searchParams.set(
    69 'start',
    70 `${pagination.pageIndex * pagination.pageSize}`,
    71 );
    72 fetchURL.searchParams.set('size', `${pagination.pageSize}`);
    73 fetchURL.searchParams.set('filters', JSON.stringify(columnFilters ?? []));
    74 fetchURL.searchParams.set('globalFilter', globalFilter ?? '');
    75 fetchURL.searchParams.set('sorting', JSON.stringify(sorting ?? []));
    76
    77 //use whatever fetch library you want, fetch, axios, etc
    78 const response = await fetch(fetchURL.href);
    79 const json = (await response.json()) as UserApiResponse;
    80 return json;
    81 },
    82 placeholderData: keepPreviousData, //don't go to 0 rows when refetching or paginating to next page
    83 });
    84
    85 const columns = useMemo<MRT_ColumnDef<User>[]>(
    86 //column definitions...
    120 );
    121
    122 const table = useMaterialReactTable({
    123 columns,
    124 data,
    125 initialState: { showColumnFilters: true },
    126 manualFiltering: true, //turn off built-in client-side filtering
    127 manualPagination: true, //turn off built-in client-side pagination
    128 manualSorting: true, //turn off built-in client-side sorting
    129 muiToolbarAlertBannerProps: isError
    130 ? {
    131 color: 'error',
    132 children: 'Error loading data',
    133 }
    134 : undefined,
    135 onColumnFiltersChange: setColumnFilters,
    136 onGlobalFilterChange: setGlobalFilter,
    137 onPaginationChange: setPagination,
    138 onSortingChange: setSorting,
    139 renderTopToolbarCustomActions: () => (
    140 <Tooltip arrow title="Refresh Data">
    141 <IconButton onClick={() => refetch()}>
    142 <RefreshIcon />
    143 </IconButton>
    144 </Tooltip>
    145 ),
    146 rowCount: meta?.totalRowCount ?? 0,
    147 state: {
    148 columnFilters,
    149 globalFilter,
    150 isLoading,
    151 pagination,
    152 showAlertBanner: isError,
    153 showProgressBars: isRefetching,
    154 sorting,
    155 },
    156 });
    157
    158 return <MaterialReactTable table={table} />;
    159};
    160
    161const queryClient = new QueryClient();
    162
    163const ExampleWithReactQueryProvider = () => (
    164 //App.tsx or AppProviders file. Don't just wrap this component with QueryClientProvider! Wrap your whole App!
    165 <QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
    166 <Example />
    167 </QueryClientProvider>
    168);
    169
    170export default ExampleWithReactQueryProvider;
    171