Customize Column Styles in Blazor TreeGrid Component
12 Oct 20216 minutes to read
The appearance of the header and content of a particular column can be customized using the CustomAttributes property.
To customize the Tree Grid column, follow the given steps:
Step 1:
Create a CSS class with custom style to override the default style for row cell and header cell.
.e-attr{
background: #5DADE2;
font-family: "Bell MT";
color: red;
font-size: 5px;
}
Step 2:
Add the custom CSS class to the specified column by using the CustomAttributes property.
@using TreeGridComponent.Data;
@using Syncfusion.Blazor.Grids;
@using Syncfusion.Blazor.TreeGrid;
<SfTreeGrid @ref="TreeGrid" DataSource="@TreeGridData" IdMapping="TaskId" ParentIdMapping="ParentId"
TreeColumnIndex="1" AllowPaging="true" Height="200">
<TreeGridColumns>
<TreeGridColumn Field="TaskId" HeaderText="Task ID" Width="80" TextAlign="Syncfusion.Blazor.Grids.TextAlign.Right"></TreeGridColumn>
<TreeGridColumn Field="TaskName" HeaderText="Task Name" CustomAttributes="@(new Dictionary<string, object>() { { "class", "e-attr" } })" Width="160"></TreeGridColumn>
<TreeGridColumn Field="Duration" HeaderText="Duration" Width="100" TextAlign="Syncfusion.Blazor.Grids.TextAlign.Right"></TreeGridColumn>
<TreeGridColumn Field="Progress" HeaderText="Progress" Width="100" TextAlign="Syncfusion.Blazor.Grids.TextAlign.Right"></TreeGridColumn>
<TreeGridColumn Field="Priority" HeaderText="Priority" Width="80"></TreeGridColumn>
</TreeGridColumns>
</SfTreeGrid>
<style>
.e-attr {
background: #5DADE2;
font-family: "Bell MT";
color: red;
font-size: 5px;
}
</style>
@code{
SfTreeGrid<TreeData> TreeGrid;
public List<TreeData> TreeGridData { get; set; }
protected override void OnInitialized()
{
this.TreeGridData = TreeData.GetSelfDataSource().ToList();
}
}
namespace TreeGridComponent.Data {
public class TreeData
{
public int TaskId { get; set; }
public string TaskName { get; set; }
public int? Duration { get; set; }
public int? Progress { get; set; }
public string Priority { get; set; }
public int? ParentId { get; set; }
public static List<TreeData> GetSelfDataSource()
{
List<TreeData> TreeDataCollection = new List<TreeData>();
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 1, TaskName = "Parent Task 1", Duration = 10, Progress = 70, Priority = "Critical", ParentId = null });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 2, TaskName = "Child task 1", Progress = 80, Priority = "Low", Duration = 50, ParentId = 1 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 3, TaskName = "Child Task 2", Duration = 5, Progress = 65, Priority = "Critical", ParentId = 2 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 4, TaskName = "Child task 3", Duration = 6, Priority = "High", Progress = 77, ParentId = 3 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 5, TaskName = "Parent Task 2", Duration = 10, Progress = 70, Priority = "Critical", ParentId = null });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 6, TaskName = "Child task 1", Duration = 4, Progress = 80, Priority = "Critical", ParentId = 5 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 7, TaskName = "Child Task 2", Duration = 5, Progress = 65, Priority = "Low", ParentId = 5 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 8, TaskName = "Child task 3", Duration = 6, Progress = 77, Priority = "High", ParentId = 5 });
TreeDataCollection.Add(new TreeData() { TaskId = 9, TaskName = "Child task 4", Duration = 6, Progress = 77, Priority = "Low", ParentId = 5 });
return TreeDataCollection;
}
}
}