React calendar component with yearly view.
$ npm install @nfort/react-yearly-calendar
Remove props
- selectedDay
Add props
- selectedDays
http://belkalab.github.io/react-yearly-calendar/
Or taste an example usage below:
var ReactDOM = require('react-dom');
var {Calendar, CalendarControls} = require('react-yearly-calendar');
function onDatePicked(date) {
alert(date);
}
ReactDOM.render(
<Calendar
year={2018}
onPickDate={onDatePicked}
/>,
document.getElementById('calendar')
);
Prop | Type | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
year | React.PropTypes.number.isRequired | year to be displayed | current year |
selectedDays | [ moment.js object ] | selected day | today |
forceFullWeeks | React.PropTypes.bool | match calendar row end with row start | false |
showDaysOfWeek | React.PropTypes.bool | show table header with days of week | true |
showWeekSeparators | React.PropTypes.bool | shows a blank column between one week and another | true |
firstDayOfWeek | React.PropTypes.number | select first day of week | 0 (Sunday) |
selectRange | React.PropTypes.bool | enable selecting ranges | false |
selectedRange | [moment.js obj, moment.js obj] |
selected range of dates in the form [start, end] |
|
customClasses | React.PropTypes.object, React.PropTypes.func | custom days/periods coloring (see section below) |
Prop | Type | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
year | React.PropTypes.number.isRequired | current year number | current year |
showTodayButton | React.PropTypes.bool | show Today button on top left | true |
Prop | Type | Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|---|
onPickDate | React.PropTypes.func | function(selectedDay, dayClasses) {} | called when user clicks on a day. dayClasses is a string representing the classes applied to that day |
onPickRange | React.PropTypes.func | function(rangeStart, rangeEnd) {} | called when user selects a range of dates (only in selectRange mode) |
Prop | Type | Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|---|
onPrevYear | React.PropTypes.func | function() {} | called on user clicking « (previous year button) |
onNextYear | React.PropTypes.func | function() {} | called on user clicking » (next year button) |
goToToday | React.PropTypes.func | function() {} | called on user clicking the today button |
The calendar is rendered as an html table
element, to ensure proper displaying even in case the style isn't being loaded.
Take a look at the css file in examples/basic/src/style.css
. Here are some head-ups if you want to style it yourself.
table.calendar
: the main element that renders the calendartable.calendar thead
: renders the week day namestable.calendar thead th.bolder
: addsbolder
class to Sundaystable.calendar td.month-name
: first column in table body, showing month namestable.calendar td.prev-month
,table.calendar td.next-month
: classes applied to the days of the previous and next month showed in a month's row to fill it up. Day numbers and callbacks are present even in these cells, so we suggest to play with text color to make days less intrusive and addpointer-events: none
to prevent clicking.table.calendar td.week-separator
: class applied to table cells used to separate one week from another. As above,pointer-events: none
is suggestedtable.calendar td.selected
: the currently selected daytable.calendar td.bolder
: the days which are Sundaystable.calendar td.range
: the days in the selected rangetable.calendar td.range-left
,table.calendar td.range-right
: the left and right boundaries of the selected range
div.calendar-controls
: the main CalendarControls containerdiv.calendar-controls .current-year
: the current yeardiv.calendar-controls .controls
: applies to next and previous arrows and to today buttondiv.calendar-controls .today
: the today button
A first attempt at making this design responsive can be seen here (window width < 1200px triggers mobile layout). Suggestions and feedback on this is welcome on issue #10
By passing the customClasses
prop, you can have a fine control on which CSS classes are assigned to each day.
customClasses
can be a function accepting a moment object as a parameter, giving back the css class to be applied to the given day.
const customClasses = day => ( day.isBefore( moment([day.year(),2,21]) ) || day.isAfter( moment([day.year(),11,21]) ) ) ? 'cheap low-season': 'expensive high-season'
- If
customClasses
is an object, the Calendar will use the keys as css classes and the values as rules to apply them.- if the value is an array of strings in the form
YYYY-MM-DD
, those days will be given the css class. Useful for single days, like holidays! - if the value is an object with a
start
and anend
value (still in theYYYY-MM-DD
form), the days in that period will be given the css class. Nice for seasons! - if the value is a string of comma-separated, three-letter weekdays names in the form
"ddd,ddd"
, the class will be given to the days of the week appearing on the string. Great for closing days during the week! - if the value is a function returning a boolean value, the class will be assigned using the function itself as a test. A must have for the finest tuning!
- if the value is an array of strings in the form
Confused? see the snippet below or try it yourself with this interactive example!
const customCSSclasses = {
holidays: [
'2018-04-25',
'2018-05-01',
'2018-06-02',
'2018-08-15',
'2018-11-01'
],
spring: {
start: '2018-03-21',
end: '2018-6-20'
},
summer: {
start: '2018-06-21',
end: '2018-09-22'
},
autumn: {
start: '2018-09-23',
end: '2018-12-21'
},
weekend: 'Sat,Sun',
winter: day => day.isBefore( moment([2018,2,21]) ) || day.isAfter( moment([2018,11,21]))
}
Clone and run
$ npm install
react-yearly-calendar is Copyright (c) 2016-2018 Belka s.r.l.
It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file (TL;DR: MIT license).
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