- Fixed an issue where dependency hooks were not being reduced properly, thus the table would rerender unnecessarily
- Renamed `toggleRowSelectedAll` to `toggleAllRowsSelected`. Duh...
- Added an `indeterminate` boolean prop to the default props for row selection toggle prop getters
- Renamed `selectedRowPaths` to `selectedRowIds`, which also no longer contains paths, but row IDs
- Grouped or nested row selection actions and state are now derived, instead of tracked in state.
- Rows now have a new property called `id`, which existed before and was derived from the `getRowId` option
- Rows now also have an `isSomeSelected` prop when using the `useRowSelect` hook, which denotes that at least one subRow is selected (if applicable)
- Rows' `path` property has been deprecated in favor of `id`
- Expanded state is now tracked with row IDs instead of paths
- RowState is now tracked with row IDs instead of paths
- `toggleExpandedByPath` has been renamed to `toggleExpandedById`, and thus accepts a row ID now, instead of a row path
useTableState was an early and hasty abstraction that hasn't proved useful in many ways. Anything
you could do with useTableState, you could easily do using the same options (assuming they exist) in
the useTable hook. For this reason, state is now a first class citizen of the useTable hook, along
with more sane properties and option locations for anything pertaining to state.
Width options (`width`, `minWidth`, `maxWidth`) options are now a part of the core column object.
useBlockLayout and useAbsoluteLayout hooks now use this new internalized information to implement
their layouts. Those examples have been updated. A virtualized-rows example has also been added to
show off how the useBlockLayout hook can be used to virtualize rows with react-window.