Multiselect
KMultiselect - A select component that allows for choosing multiple items and creating new options.
- Selected items labels will be displayed as dismissible badges.
- When the dropdown is open, the input field for filtering items will be displayed.
- If at least one item is selected, there will be a clear all button displayed in place of the dropdown chevron when the multiselect has focus.
- Selected items are displayed at the top of the dropdown for easy access (refreshed on multiselect collapse).
<KMultiselect label="Pick Something" :items="items" />
Props
v-model
KMultiselect works as regular inputs do using v-model
for data binding:
<template>
<KLabel>Value:</KLabel> {{ myVal }}
<KMultiselect v-model="myVal" :items="items" />
<KButton @click="clearIt">Clear</KButton>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
import { MultiselectItem } from '@kong/kongponents'
const myVal = ref<string[]>(["cats", "dogs", "bunnies"])
const items: MultiselectItem[] = [
{ label: 'Cats', value: 'cats', selected: true },
{ label: 'Dogs', value: 'dogs', selected: true, disabled: true },
{ label: 'Bunnies', value: 'bunnies', selected: true },
{ label: 'Lions', value: 'lions' },
{ label: 'Tigers', value: 'tigers' },
{ label: 'Bears', value: 'bears' },
{ label: 'An extremely lengthy truncated item', value: 'long' }
]
const clearIt = () => {
myVal.value = []
}
</script>
items
An array of items containing a label
and value
.
You may also specify:
- a certain item is
selected
by default - a certain item is
disabled
- certain items are grouped under a
group
<KMultiselect :items="[{
label: 'Cats',
value: 'cats',
selected: true
}, {
label: 'Dogs',
value: 'dogs',
selected: true,
disabled: true,
}, {
label: 'Bunnies',
value: 'bunnies',
selected: true
},
{
label: 'Lions',
value: 'lions',
disabled: true,
}, {
label: 'Tigers',
value: 'tigers',
disabled: true
}, {
label: 'Bears',
value: 'bears'
}, {
label: 'An extremely lengthy truncated item',
value: 'long'
}, ...]"
/>
help
Pass a string
of help text to be displayed below the multiselect element.
<KMultiselect label="Label" help="Help text or other tips." :items="items" />
error
A boolean
to put the component into an error state.
<KMultiselect error :items="items" />
<KMultiselect error collapsed-context help="Help text can turn into error message." :items="items" />
enableItemCreation
KMultiselect can offer users the ability to add custom items to the list by typing the item they want to and then clicking the ... (Add new value)
item at the bottom of the list, which will also automatically select it.
Newly created items will have a label
consisting of the user input and a randomly generated id for the value
to ensure uniqueness. The item will also have an attribute custom
set to true
. This action triggers an item-added
event containing the added item data.
Deselecting the item will completely remove it from the list and underlying data, and trigger a item-removed
event containing the removed item's data.
NOTE
You cannot add an item if the label
matches the label
of a pre-existing item. In that scenario the ... (Add new value)
item will not be displayed.
<template>
<KLabel>Value:</KLabel> {{ mySelections }}
<KLabel>Added Items:</KLabel> {{ addedItems }}
<KMultiselect
v-model="mySelections"
:items="items"
enable-item-creation
@item-added="(item) => trackNewItems(item, true)"
@item-removed="(item) => trackNewItems(item, false)"
/>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
const mySelections = ref(['cats','bunnies'])
const addedItems = ref([])
const trackNewItems = (item, added) => {
if (added) {
addedItems.value.push(item)
} else {
addedItems.value = addedItems.value.filter(anItem => anItem.value !== item.value)
}
}
</script>
label
The label for the select.
<KMultiselect label="Cool label" :items="items" />
labelAttributes
Use the labelAttributes
prop to configure the KLabel's props if using the label
prop. This example shows using the label-attributes
to set up a tooltip, see the slot section if you want to slot HTML into the tooltip rather than use plain text.
<KMultiselect
label="Name"
:label-attributes="{
info: 'I use the KLabel `info` prop',
'data-testid': 'test'
}"
:items="items"
/>
width
You can pass a width
string for the dropdown. By default the width
is 100%
. This is the width of the input, dropdown, and selected item. Currently we support numbers (will be converted to px
), auto
, and percentages for width.
NOTE
Because we are controlling the widths of multiple elements, we recommend using this prop to control the width instead of explicitly adding classes or styles to the KMultiselect
component.
<KMultiselect width="80%" :items="items" />
selectedRowCount
Use this prop to customize the number of rows of selected items to display when the multiselect has focus. By default, we display one row of selected items.
Additional selections will be combined into a count badge if the number of selections would extend beyond the selection row count. You can hover over this badge to see the remaining selections.
Note that this prop only applies when collapsedContext
prop is false
.
<KMultiselect :selected-row-count="2" :items="items" />
collapsedContext
By default KMultiselect displays selected items as badges. However, you can set collapsedContext
to true
and have it display just the number of selected items.
<KMultiselect collapsed-context :items="items" />
dropdownMaxHeight
You can pass a dropdownMaxHeight
string for the dropdown. By default, the dropdownMaxHeight
is 300px
. This is the maximum height of the KMultiselect
dropdown when open. You can pass a number (will be converted to px
), auto
, percentages, or vh
units.
<KMultiselect :items="items" dropdown-max-height="150" />
dropdownFooterText
Adds informational text to the bottom of the dropdown options which remains visible even if the content is scrolled. Can also be slotted.
<KMultiselect dropdown-footer-text="Sticky dropdown footer text" :items="items" />
dropdownFooterTextPosition
By default, the dropdown footer text will be stuck to the bottom of the dropdown and will always be visible even if the dropdown content is scrolled.
If you want to override the behaviour and have the footer text at the end of the dropdown list, use the value static
. This ensures the footer text is visible only when the user scrolls to view the bottom of the list.
Accepted values: sticky
(default) and static
.
<KMultiselect dropdown-footer-text-position="static" dropdown-footer-text="Static dropdown footer text" :items="items" />
loading
You can use the loading
prop to show a loading indicator in place of the chevron while fetching data from API. See autosuggest for a functional example.
<KMultiselect loading :items="items" />
filterFunction
Use this prop to override the default filter function if you want to do something like filter on an attribute other than label
. Your filter function should take as parameter a JSON object containing the items to filter on (items
) and the query string (query
) and return the filtered items. See slots for an example.
import { MultiselectFilterFunctionParams } from '@kong/kongponents'
const myCustomFilter = ({ items, query }: MultiselectFilterFunctionParams) => {
return items.filter(anItem => anItem.label.includes(query))
}
NOTE
filterFunction
does not work with autosuggest
enabled. For autosuggest
, you are in charge of filtering the options, so KMultiselect
won't filter them internally. See autosuggest for more details.
autosuggest
Add the autosuggest
prop to trigger a query to an API with the filter keyword, and then update items
asynchronously as suggestions as the user types. Empty state content can be configured using the empty
slot.
NOTE
When using autosuggest
, you must use v-model
otherwise the Multiselect can't maintain an accurate list of which items are selected.
<template>
<KMultiselect
v-model="myAutoVal"
autosuggest
:items="items"
:loading="loading"
@query-change="onQueryChange"
>
<template #item-template="{ item }">
<div class="item-container">
<div class="item-label">{{ item.label }}</div>
<div class="item-description">{{ item.description }}</div>
</div>
</template>
<template #empty>
<div>No results found</div>
</template>
</KMultiselect>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
import { MultiselectItem } from '@kong/kongponents'
const allItems: MultiselectItems[] = new Array(10).fill().map((_, i) => ({
label: `${i % 2 === 0 ? 'Even item' : 'Odd item'} ${i}`,
description: `This is the description for item ${i}.`,
value: `autosuggest-item-${i}`,
...(i > 5 && { group: `${i % 2 === 0 ? 'Even items greater than 5' : 'Odd items greater than 5'}` })
}))
const myAutoVal = ref([])
const defaultItems = ref([])
const items = ref([])
const loading = ref(false)
const onQueryChange = (val) => {
if (val === '' && !defaultItems.value.length) {
loading.value = true
// If query is empty and default items are not fetched, fetch them
setTimeout(() => {
defaultItems.value = [...allItems]
items.value = defaultItems.value.map((item) => ({ ...item }))
loading.value = false
}, 200)
return
}
if (val === '') {
// If query is empty and default items are fetched, use the default items
items.value = defaultItems.value.map((item) => ({ ...item }))
return
}
loading.value = true
// Otherwise fetch items that contain the keyword
setTimeout(() => {
items.value = allItems
.filter(
(item) =>
item.label.toLowerCase().includes(val.toLowerCase()) ||
item.description.toLowerCase().includes(val.toLowerCase())
)
.map((item) => ({ ...item }))
loading.value = false
}, 200)
}
</script>
autosuggest with debounce
NOTE
The query-change
event triggers immediately when the user types in the input. If you need to send API requests in the query-change
event handler, you may want to implement a debounce function. The following is an example:
<template>
<KMultiselect
v-model="myDebounceAutoVal"
autosuggest
:items="items"
:loading="loading"
@query-change="onQueryChange"
>
<template #item-template="{ item }">
<div class="item-container">
<div class="item-label">{{ item.label }}</div>
<div class="item-description">{{ item.description }}</div>
</div>
</template>
</KMultiselect>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
import { MultiselectItem } from '@kong/kongponents'
function debounce(func, timeout) {
let timer
return function (...args) {
clearTimeout(timer)
timer = setTimeout(() => {
func.apply(this, args)
}, timeout)
}
}
const allItems: MultiselectItems[] = new Array(10).fill().map((_, i) => ({
label: `${i % 2 === 0 ? 'Even item' : 'Odd item'} ${i}`,
description: `This is the description for item ${i}.`,
value: `autosuggest-item-${i}`,
...(i > 5 && { group: `${i % 2 === 0 ? 'Even items greater than 5' : 'Odd items greater than 5'}` })
}))
const myDebounceAutoVal = ref([])
const defaultItems = ref([])
const items = ref([])
const loading = ref(true)
const onQueryChange = (val) => {
if (val === '' && !defaultItems.value.length) {
// If query is empty and default items are not fetched, fetch them
loading.value = true
setTimeout(() => {
defaultItems.value = allItems
items.value = defaultItems.value.map(item => ({ ...item }))
loading.value = false
}, 200)
return
}
if (val === '') {
// If query is empty and default items are fetched, use the default items
items.value = defaultItems.value.map(item => ({ ...item }))
return
}
debouncedHandler(val)
}
const debouncedHandler = debounce(function (val) {
loading.value = true
// Fetch items that contain the keyword
setTimeout(() => {
items.value =
allItems
.filter(item => item.label.toLowerCase().includes(val.toLowerCase()) || item.description.toLowerCase().includes(val.toLowerCase()))
.map(item => ({ ...item }))
loading.value = false
}, 200)
}, 400)
</script>
Attribute Binding
You can pass any input attribute and it will get properly bound to the element.
<KMultiselect disabled :items="[{ label: 'test', value: 'test' }]" />
required
KMultiselect will display a red dot to indicate a field is required if you set the required
attribute and provide a label
. See KLabel's props for more information.
NOTE
Text passed in for the label
will automatically strip any trailing *
when used with the required
attribute to try to prevent duplicate visual indications.
<KMultiselect label="Name" required :items="items" />
Slots
label-tooltip
If you want to utilize HTML in the multiselect label's tooltip, use the slot.
<KMultiselect label="My tooltip" :items="items">
<template #label-tooltip>Id: <code>8576925e-d7e0-4ecd-8f14-15db1765e69a</code></template>
</KMultiselect>
item-template
You can use the item-template
slot to customize the look and feel of your items. Use slots to gain access to the item
data.
<KMultiselect :items="myItems">
<template #item-template="{ item }">
<div class="custom-item">
<KongIcon />
<div class="custom-item-title-container">
<span class="custom-item-title">{{ item?.label }}</span>
<span class="custom-item-description">{{ item?.label }} description.</span>
</div>
</div>
</template>
</KMultiselect>
empty
You can use the empty
slot to customize the look of the dropdown list when there is no options. See autosuggest for an example of this slot.
dropdown-footer-text
Slot the content of the dropdown footer text. This slot will override the dropdownFooterText
prop if provided.
<KMultiselect dropdown-footer-text="I am replaceable" :items="items">
<template #dropdown-footer-text>
Come as you are
</template>
</KMultiselect>
Events
selected
Fires when an item is clicked. Returns an array of selected item objects.
update:modelValue
Fires when selections are changed. Returns an array of selected item values.
change
Fires when selections are changed. Returns the last item selected/deselected object or null
.
item-added
Fires when enableItemCreation
is true and an item is added. Returns the item object being added to selections.
item-removed
Fires when enableItemCreation
is true and an added item is deselected. Returns the item object being removed from selections.
query-change
Fires when the filter string is changed. Returns the query
String.
An example of hooking into events to modify newly created items (enableItemCreation
) as they are added.
<template>
<KMultiselect
:items="myItems"
enable-item-creation
@item-added="item => handleAddedItem(item, true)"
@item-removed="item => handleAddedItem(item, false)"
@selected="handleSelection"
/>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
import { ref } from 'vue'
const myItems = ref([
{
label: '200',
value: 200,
selected: true,
disabled: true
},
{
label: '400',
value: 400
},
{
label: '401',
value: 401
},
{
label: '404',
value: 404
},
{
label: '500',
value: 500
},
])
const handleAddedItem = (item, added) => {
if (added) { // addition
item.custom = true
// mutate added items in some way
item.value = `${item.label}-overridden`
myItems.value.push(item)
} else { // removal
myItems.value = myItems.value.filter(anItem => anItem.value !== item.value)
}
}
const handleSelection = (selectedItems) => {
// updated selected state
myItems.value.forEach(item => {
const itemSelected = selectedItems.filter(sItem => sItem.value === item.value).length
item.selected = itemSelected ? true : false
})
}
</script>