Sortable is a minimalist JavaScript library for reorderable drag-and-drop lists.
Demo: http://rubaxa.github.io/Sortable/
- Supports touch devices and modern browsers (including IE9)
- Can drag from one list to another or within the same list
- CSS animation when moving items
- Supports drag handles and selectable text (better than voidberg's html5sortable)
- Smart auto-scrolling
- Built using native HTML5 drag and drop API
- Supports Meteor, AngularJS, React and Polymer
- Supports any CSS library, e.g. Bootstrap
- Simple API
- CDN
- No jQuery (but there is support)
- Sortable v1.0 — New capabilities (December 22, 2014)
- Sorting with the help of HTML5 Drag'n'Drop API (December 23, 2013)
<ul id="items">
<li>item 1</li>
<li>item 2</li>
<li>item 3</li>
</ul>
var el = document.getElementById('items');
var sortable = Sortable.create(el);
You can use any element for the list and its elements, not just ul
/li
. Here is an example with div
s.
var sortable = new Sortable(el, {
group: "name", // or { name: "...", pull: [true, false, clone], put: [true, false, array] }
sort: true, // sorting inside list
delay: 0, // time in milliseconds to define when the sorting should start
disabled: false, // Disables the sortable if set to true.
store: null, // @see Store
animation: 150, // ms, animation speed moving items when sorting, `0` — without animation
handle: ".my-handle", // Drag handle selector within list items
filter: ".ignore-elements", // Selectors that do not lead to dragging (String or Function)
draggable: ".item", // Specifies which items inside the element should be sortable
ghostClass: "sortable-ghost", // Class name for the drop placeholder
chosenClass: "sortable-chosen", // Class name for the chosen item
dataIdAttr: 'data-id',
forceFallback: false, // ignore the HTML5 DnD behaviour and force the fallback to kick in
fallbackClass: "sortable-fallback" // Class name for the cloned DOM Element when using forceFallback
fallbackOnBody: false // Appends the cloned DOM Element into the Document's Body
scroll: true, // or HTMLElement
scrollSensitivity: 30, // px, how near the mouse must be to an edge to start scrolling.
scrollSpeed: 10, // px
setData: function (dataTransfer, dragEl) {
dataTransfer.setData('Text', dragEl.textContent);
},
// dragging started
onStart: function (/**Event*/evt) {
evt.oldIndex; // element index within parent
},
// dragging ended
onEnd: function (/**Event*/evt) {
evt.oldIndex; // element's old index within parent
evt.newIndex; // element's new index within parent
},
// Element is dropped into the list from another list
onAdd: function (/**Event*/evt) {
var itemEl = evt.item; // dragged HTMLElement
evt.from; // previous list
// + indexes from onEnd
},
// Changed sorting within list
onUpdate: function (/**Event*/evt) {
var itemEl = evt.item; // dragged HTMLElement
// + indexes from onEnd
},
// Called by any change to the list (add / update / remove)
onSort: function (/**Event*/evt) {
// same properties as onUpdate
},
// Element is removed from the list into another list
onRemove: function (/**Event*/evt) {
// same properties as onUpdate
},
// Attempt to drag a filtered element
onFilter: function (/**Event*/evt) {
var itemEl = evt.item; // HTMLElement receiving the `mousedown|tapstart` event.
},
// Event when you move an item in the list or between lists
onMove: function (/**Event*/evt) {
// Example: http://jsbin.com/tuyafe/1/edit?js,output
evt.dragged; // dragged HTMLElement
evt.draggedRect; // TextRectangle {left, top, right и bottom}
evt.related; // HTMLElement on which have guided
evt.relatedRect; // TextRectangle
// return false; — for cancel
}
});
To drag elements from one list into another, both lists must have the same group
value.
You can also define whether lists can give away, give and keep a copy (clone
), and receive elements.
- name:
String
— group name - pull:
true|false|'clone'
— ability to move from the list.clone
— copy the item, rather than move. - put:
true|false|["foo", "bar"]
— whether elements can be added from other lists, or an array of group names from which elements can be taken. Demo: http://jsbin.com/naduvo/2/edit?html,js,output
Sorting inside list.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/xizeh/2/edit?html,js,output
Time in milliseconds to define when the sorting should start.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/xizeh/4/edit?html,js,output
Disables the sortable if set to true
.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/xiloqu/1/edit?html,js,output
var sortable = Sortable.create(list);
document.getElementById("switcher").onclick = function () {
var state = sortable.option("disabled"); // get
sortable.option("disabled", !state); // set
};
To make list items draggable, Sortable disables text selection by the user. That's not always desirable. To allow text selection, define a drag handler, which is an area of every list element that allows it to be dragged around.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/newize/1/edit?html,js,output
Sortable.create(el, {
handle: ".my-handle"
});
<ul>
<li><span class="my-handle">::</span> list item text one
<li><span class="my-handle">::</span> list item text two
</ul>
.my-handle {
cursor: move;
cursor: -webkit-grabbing;
}
Sortable.create(list, {
filter: ".js-remove, .js-edit",
onFilter: function (evt) {
var item = evt.item,
ctrl = evt.target;
if (Sortable.utils.is(ctrl, ".js-remove")) { // Click on remove button
item.parentNode.removeChild(item); // remove sortable item
}
else if (Sortable.utils.is(ctrl, ".js-edit")) { // Click on edit link
// ...
}
}
})
Class name for the drop placeholder (default sortable-ghost
).
Demo: http://jsbin.com/hunifu/1/edit?css,js,output
.ghost {
opacity: 0.4;
}
Sortable.create(list, {
ghostClass: "ghost"
});
Class name for the chosen item (default sortable-chosen
).
Demo: http://jsbin.com/hunifu/edit?html,css,js,output
.chosen {
color: #fff;
background-color: #c00;
}
Sortable.create(list, {
delay: 500,
chosenClass: "chosen"
});
If set to true
, the Fallback for non HTML5 Browser will be used, even if we are using an HTML5 Browser.
This gives us the possiblity to test the behaviour for older Browsers even in newer Browser, or make the Drag 'n Drop feel more consistent between Desktop , Mobile and old Browsers.
On top of that, the Fallback always generates a copy of that DOM Element and appends the class fallbackClass
definied in the options. This behaviour controls the look of this 'dragged' Element.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/pucurizace/edit?html,css,js,output
If set to true
, the page (or sortable-area) scrolls when coming to an edge.
Demo:
window
: http://jsbin.com/boqugumiqi/1/edit?html,js,outputoverflow: hidden
: http://jsbin.com/kohamakiwi/1/edit?html,js,output
Defines how near the mouse must be to an edge to start scrolling.
The speed at which the window should scroll once the mouse pointer gets within the scrollSensitivity
distance.
Include ng-sortable.js
Demo: http://jsbin.com/naduvo/1/edit?html,js,output
<div ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="demo">
<ul ng-sortable>
<li ng-repeat="item in items">{{item}}</li>
</ul>
<ul ng-sortable="{ group: 'foobar' }">
<li ng-repeat="item in foo">{{item}}</li>
</ul>
<ul ng-sortable="barConfig">
<li ng-repeat="item in bar">{{item}}</li>
</ul>
</div>
angular.module('myApp', ['ng-sortable'])
.controller('demo', ['$scope', function ($scope) {
$scope.items = ['item 1', 'item 2'];
$scope.foo = ['foo 1', '..'];
$scope.bar = ['bar 1', '..'];
$scope.barConfig = {
group: 'foobar',
animation: 150,
onSort: function (/** ngSortEvent */evt){
// @see https://github.com/RubaXa/Sortable/blob/master/ng-sortable.js#L18-L24
}
};
}]);
Include react-sortable-mixin.js. See more options.
var SortableList = React.createClass({
mixins: [SortableMixin],
getInitialState: function() {
return {
items: ['Mixin', 'Sortable']
};
},
handleSort: function (/** Event */evt) { /*..*/ },
render: function() {
return <ul>{
this.state.items.map(function (text) {
return <li>{text}</li>
})
}</ul>
}
});
React.render(<SortableList />, document.body);
//
// Groups
//
var AllUsers = React.createClass({
mixins: [SortableMixin],
sortableOptions: {
ref: "user",
group: "shared",
model: "users"
},
getInitialState: function() {
return { users: ['Abbi', 'Adela', 'Bud', 'Cate', 'Davis', 'Eric']; };
},
render: function() {
return (
<h1>Users</h1>
<ul ref="user">{
this.state.users.map(function (text) {
return <li>{text}</li>
})
}</ul>
);
}
});
var ApprovedUsers = React.createClass({
mixins: [SortableMixin],
sortableOptions: { group: "shared" },
getInitialState: function() {
return { items: ['Hal', 'Judy']; };
},
render: function() {
return <ul>{
this.state.items.map(function (text) {
return <li>{text}</li>
})
}</ul>
}
});
React.render(<div>
<AllUsers/>
<hr/>
<ApprovedUsers/>
</div>, document.body);
Include knockout-sortable.js
<div data-bind="sortable: {foreach: yourObservableArray, options: {/* sortable options here */}}">
<!-- optional item template here -->
</div>
<div data-bind="draggable: {foreach: yourObservableArray, options: {/* sortable options here */}}">
<!-- optional item template here -->
</div>
Using this bindingHandler sorts the observableArray when the user sorts the HTMLElements.
The sortable/draggable bindingHandlers supports the same syntax as Knockouts built in template binding except for the data
option, meaning that you could supply the name of a template or specify a separate templateEngine. The difference between the sortable and draggable handlers is that the draggable has the sortable group
option set to {pull:'clone',put: false}
and the sort
option set to false by default (overridable).
Other attributes are:
- options: an object that contains settings for the underlaying sortable, ie
group
,handle
, events etc. - collection: if your
foreach
array is a computed then you would supply the underlaying observableArray that you would like to sort here.
<link rel="import" href="bower_components/Sortable/Sortable.html">
<sortable-js handle=".handle">
<template is="dom-repeat" items={{names}}>
<div>{{item}}</div>
</template>
<sortable-js>
Get or set the option.
For each element in the set, get the first element that matches the selector by testing the element itself and traversing up through its ancestors in the DOM tree.
Serializes the sortable's item data-id
's (dataIdAttr
option) into an array of string.
Sorts the elements according to the array.
var order = sortable.toArray();
sortable.sort(order.reverse()); // apply
Save the current sorting (see store)
Removes the sortable functionality completely.
Saving and restoring of the sort.
<ul>
<li data-id="1">order</li>
<li data-id="2">save</li>
<li data-id="3">restore</li>
</ul>
Sortable.create(el, {
group: "localStorage-example",
store: {
/**
* Get the order of elements. Called once during initialization.
* @param {Sortable} sortable
* @returns {Array}
*/
get: function (sortable) {
var order = localStorage.getItem(sortable.options.group);
return order ? order.split('|') : [];
},
/**
* Save the order of elements. Called onEnd (when the item is dropped).
* @param {Sortable} sortable
*/
set: function (sortable) {
var order = sortable.toArray();
localStorage.setItem(sortable.options.group, order.join('|'));
}
}
})
Demo: http://jsbin.com/luxero/2/edit?html,js,output
<!-- Latest compiled and minified CSS -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.1/css/bootstrap.min.css"/>
<!-- Latest Sortable -->
<script src="http://rubaxa.github.io/Sortable/Sortable.js"></script>
<!-- Simple List -->
<ul id="simpleList" class="list-group">
<li class="list-group-item">This is <a href="http://rubaxa.github.io/Sortable/">Sortable</a></li>
<li class="list-group-item">It works with Bootstrap...</li>
<li class="list-group-item">...out of the box.</li>
<li class="list-group-item">It has support for touch devices.</li>
<li class="list-group-item">Just drag some elements around.</li>
</ul>
<script>
// Simple list
Sortable.create(simpleList, { /* options */ });
</script>
Create new instance.
Link to the active instance.
- on(el
:HTMLElement
, event:String
, fn:Function
) — attach an event handler function - off(el
:HTMLElement
, event:String
, fn:Function
) — remove an event handler - css(el
:HTMLElement
):Object
— get the values of all the CSS properties - css(el
:HTMLElement
, prop:String
):Mixed
— get the value of style properties - css(el
:HTMLElement
, prop:String
, value:String
) — set one CSS properties - css(el
:HTMLElement
, props:Object
) — set more CSS properties - find(ctx
:HTMLElement
, tagName:String
[, iterator:Function
]):Array
— get elements by tag name - bind(ctx
:Mixed
, fn:Function
):Function
— Takes a function and returns a new one that will always have a particular context - is(el
:HTMLElement
, selector:String
):Boolean
— check the current matched set of elements against a selector - closest(el
:HTMLElement
, selector:String
[, ctx:HTMLElement
]):HTMLElement|Null
— for each element in the set, get the first element that matches the selector by testing the element itself and traversing up through its ancestors in the DOM tree - toggleClass(el
:HTMLElement
, name:String
, state:Boolean
) — add or remove one classes from each element
<!-- CDNJS :: Sortable (https://cdnjs.com/) -->
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/Sortable/1.4.2/Sortable.min.js"></script>
<!-- jsDelivr :: Sortable (http://www.jsdelivr.com/) -->
<script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/sortable/1.4.2/Sortable.min.js"></script>
<!-- jsDelivr :: Sortable :: Latest (http://www.jsdelivr.com/) -->
<script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/sortable/latest/Sortable.min.js"></script>
To assemble plugin for jQuery, perform the following steps:
cd Sortable
npm install
grunt jquery
Now you can use jquery.fn.sortable.js
:
(or jquery.fn.sortable.min.js
if you run grunt jquery:min
)
$("#list").sortable({ /* options */ }); // init
$("#list").sortable("widget"); // get Sortable instance
$("#list").sortable("destroy"); // destroy Sortable instance
$("#list").sortable("{method-name}"); // call an instance method
$("#list").sortable("{method-name}", "foo", "bar"); // call an instance method with parameters
And grunt jquery:mySortableFunc
→ jquery.fn.mySortableFunc.js
Please, read this.
Copyright 2013-2015 Lebedev Konstantin [email protected] http://rubaxa.github.io/Sortable/
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.