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Create a custom cell editor, and use it in your Vue 3 data grid by declaring it as a class.

Overview

You can declare a custom editor for the HotTable component by declaring it as a class and passing it to the Handsontable options or creating an editor component. You can use it many times and with different properties. To differentiate between editor instances, pass a key attribute.

Find out which Vue 3 versions are supported

Example - Declaring an editor as a class

The following example implements the @handsontable/vue3 component with a custom editor added, utilizing the placeholder attribute in the editor’s input element.

JavaScript
import { defineComponent } from 'vue';
import { HotTable } from '@handsontable/vue3';
import { TextEditor } from 'handsontable/editors/textEditor';
import { registerAllModules } from 'handsontable/registry';
// register Handsontable's modules
registerAllModules();
class CustomEditor extends TextEditor {
createElements() {
super.createElements();
this.TEXTAREA = document.createElement('input');
this.TEXTAREA.setAttribute('placeholder', 'Custom placeholder');
this.TEXTAREA.setAttribute('data-hot-input', true);
this.textareaStyle = this.TEXTAREA.style;
this.TEXTAREA_PARENT.innerText = '';
this.TEXTAREA_PARENT.appendChild(this.TEXTAREA);
}
}
const ExampleComponent = defineComponent({
data() {
return {
hotSettings: {
startRows: 5,
columns: [
{
editor: CustomEditor
}
],
colHeaders: true,
colWidths: 200,
autoWrapRow: true,
autoWrapCol: true,
height: 'auto',
licenseKey: 'non-commercial-and-evaluation'
}
};
},
components: {
HotTable,
}
});
export default ExampleComponent;
HTML
<div id="example1">
<hot-table :settings="hotSettings"></hot-table>
</div>

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