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filter-panel
Use when implementing filter and refine data displays.
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Use when implementing filter and refine data displays.
Install with Codex or Claude Copy this prompt, paste it into Codex, Claude, or another assistant, and let it review the skill page and install it for you.
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| name | filter-panel |
| description | Use when implementing filter and refine data displays. |
| metadata | {"id":"filter-panel","category":"data-display","pattern":"Filter Panel","source":"uxpatterns.dev","url":"https://uxpatterns.dev/patterns/data-display/filter-panel","sourcePath":"apps/web/content/patterns/data-display/filter-panel.mdx"} |
Filter and refine data displays
A Filter Panel pattern helps teams create a reliable way to help users narrow a large collection without losing track of the active constraints or available results. It is most useful when teams need search and catalog refinement. Compared with adjacent patterns, this pattern should reduce friction without hiding the state, rules, or recovery paths people need to keep moving.
references/pattern.md, then choose the smallest viable variation.aria-describedby or structural headings when useful.The Problem: Teams often pick a visually familiar pattern before confirming whether users need comparison, exploration, or scanning.
How to Fix It? Start from the user task, then map the layout to comparison, chronology, hierarchy, or overview needs.
The Problem: A polished default view still feels broken when loading, empty, and error states are inconsistent.
How to Fix It? Design the data lifecycle up front, including empty, partial, stale, and failed results.
The Problem: Large tables, dense dashboards, and heavy cards collapse quickly on small screens.
How to Fix It? Define a mobile strategy such as stacked cards, progressive disclosure, or alternate summaries before implementation.
For full implementation detail, examples, and testing notes, see references/pattern.md.
Pattern page: https://uxpatterns.dev/patterns/data-display/filter-panel