Customizable date (and time) picker. Opt-in UI, no jQuery!
Rome wasn't built in a day. Browser support includes every sane browser and IE7+.
You can see a live demo here.
Oh, rome
synchronizes in real-time with inputs, never steals focus, and its CSS is entirely customizable!
Rome depends on moment
. It doesn't depend on jQuery or other weird frameworks, though.
From npm or Bower.
npm install --save rome
bower install --save rome
Note that if you're using the standalone version, the API is published under the rome
global. If you're using CJS, then you'll have to require('rome')
.
You can use your own distribution of moment
, using rome.standalone.js
.
<script src='moment.js'></script>
<script src='rome.standalone.js'></script>
You could just use the bundled rome.js
distribution, which comes with moment
in it.
<script src='rome.js'></script>
If you need to do anything regarding internationalization, refer to moment
for that. Ideally, make those changes before starting to create Rome calendar components.
The API in rome
exposes a few properties.
If a calendar is associated to the provided elem
, then that calendar is returned, otherwise returns null
. DOM elements can only have one associated calendar.
This method creates a calendar instance and associates it to the provided elem
. This association can't be undone even by .destroy()
ing the rome
instance, because it can be .restore()
d later. Subsequent calls to rome(elem)
will return the associated calendar, instead of creating a new one (see rome.find(elem)
). Think of this as a "caching feature".
Creating a calendar has a ton of options. These have reasonable defaults that are easy to adjust, too. The options are listed below.
Option | Description |
---|---|
appendTo |
DOM element where the calendar will be appended to. Takes 'parent' as the parent element |
autoClose |
When set to true , the calendar is auto-closed when picking a day _(or a time if time: true and date: false ). A value of 'time' will only auto-close the calendar when a time is picked. |
autoHideOnBlur |
Hides the calendar when focusing something other than the input field |
autoHideOnClick |
Hides the calendar when clicking away |
date |
The calendar shows days and allows you to navigate between months |
dateValidator |
Function to validate that a given date is considered valid. Receives a native Date parameter. |
dayFormat |
Format string used to display days on the calendar |
initialValue |
Value used to initialize calendar. Takes string , Date , or moment |
inputFormat |
Format string used for the input field as well as the results of rome |
invalidate |
Ensures the date is valid when the field is blurred |
strictParse |
Compares input strictly against inputFormat , and partial matches are discarded |
max |
Disallow dates past max . Takes string , Date , or moment |
min |
Disallow dates before min . Takes string , Date , or moment |
monthFormat |
Format string used by the calendar to display months and their year |
monthsInCalendar |
How many months get rendered in the calendar |
required |
Is the field required or do you allow empty values? |
styles |
CSS classes applied to elements on the calendar |
time |
The calendar shows the current time and allows you to change it using a dropdown |
timeFormat |
Format string used to display the time on the calendar |
timeInterval |
Seconds between each option in the time dropdown |
timeValidator |
Function to validate that a given time is considered valid. Receives a native Date parameter. |
weekdayFormat |
Format used to display weekdays. Takes min (Mo), short (Mon), long (Monday), or an array with seven strings of your choosing. |
weekStart |
Day considered the first of the week. Range: Sunday 0 - Saturday 6 |
horizontalAlignment |
Defines the alignment of calendar with the input element: left , center , right |
Note that in the case of input fields, when initialValue
isn't provided the initial value is inferred from elem.value
instead. In the case of inline calendars, new Date()
will be used as a default if none is provided.
If you pass in an element other than an input tag, then this method behaves slightly differently. The difference is that appendTo
becomes the provided elem
, and the calendar won't attach itself to an input element. The options listed below will be ignored.
autoHideOnBlur
, because there is no input field that can be tracked forblur
eventsinvalidate
, because there is no input field to keep consistent with the calendar componentrequired
, because you can easily do that on an input fieldstyles.positioned
, because the calendar will be considered inlined
All of the other options still apply, and identical behavior should be expected.
If you don't set an option, the default will be used. You can look up the defaults here, or below.
{
"appendTo": document.body,
"autoClose": true,
"autoHideOnBlur": true,
"autoHideOnClick": true,
"date": true,
"dateValidator": Function.prototype,
"dayFormat": "DD",
"initialValue": null,
"inputFormat": "YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm",
"invalidate": true,
"max": null,
"min": null,
"monthFormat": "MMMM YYYY",
"monthsInCalendar": 1,
"required": false,
"strictParse": false,
"styles": {
"back": "rd-back",
"container": "rd-container",
"date": "rd-date",
"dayBody": "rd-days-body",
"dayBodyElem": "rd-day-body",
"dayConcealed": "rd-day-concealed",
"dayDisabled": "rd-day-disabled",
"dayHead": "rd-days-head",
"dayHeadElem": "rd-day-head",
"dayRow": "rd-days-row",
"dayTable": "rd-days",
"month": "rd-month",
"next": "rd-next",
"positioned": "rd-container-attachment",
"selectedDay": "rd-day-selected",
"selectedTime": "rd-time-selected",
"time": "rd-time",
"timeList": "rd-time-list",
"timeOption": "rd-time-option"
},
"time": true,
"timeFormat": "HH:mm",
"timeInterval": 1800,
"timeValidator": Function.prototype,
"weekdayFormat": "min",
"weekStart": moment().weekday(0).day()
}
When you create a calendar with rome(elem)
, you'll get a cal
instance back. This has a few API methods. Most of these methods return the calendar instance whenever possible, allowing for method chaining.
Shows the calendar. If associated with an input, the calendar gets absolutely position right below the input field.
Hides the calendar.
Auto-generated unique identifier assigned to this instance of Rome.
The DOM element that contains the calendar.
The associated DOM element assigned to this calendar instance. This is the input field or parent element that you used to create the calendar.
Returns the current date, as defined by the calendar, in a native Date
object. If required: false
you'll get null
when the input field is empty.
Returns the current date, as defined by the calendar, using the provided options.inputFormat
format string or a format of your choosing. If required: false
you'll get null
when the input field is empty.
Returns a copy of the moment
object underlying the current date in the calendar. If required: false
you'll get null
when the input field is empty.
Removes the calendar from the DOM and all of its associated DOM event listeners. The only responsive API method becomes the .restore
method described below, the rest of the API becomes no-op methods. After emitting the destroyed
event, all event listeners are removed from the instance.
Returns true
when the calendar is in a destroyed state and false
otherwise.
Restores the calendar, using the provided options (or the default options). The associated DOM element can't be changed. The API methods are restored to their original functionality.
If an options object is provided, it destroys the calendar and initializes it with the provided options. Effectively the same as calling .restore(options)
immediately after calling .destroy()
.
If no options object is provided, a copy of the current options is returned.
Resets the options to the factory defaults. Effectively the same as calling .options({})
while preserving the appendTo
option.
Emits all of the data events listed below. Mostly used internally, should be avoided in consumer-land.
Sets the current date to the provided value
, but only if that value is valid according to the rules defined by the calendar. Takes string
, Date
, or moment
. Mostly used internally, and it doesn't emit any events.
Forces a refresh of the calendar. This method will redraw the month and update the dates that can be selected in accordance with dateValidator
and timeValidator
.
Steps the calendar display back by one month. Equivalent to clicking the 'back' button.
Returns undefined
.
Steps the calendar display forward by one month. Equivalent to clicking the 'next' button.
Returns undefined
.
Rome calendars also provide a few events you can subscribe to. These events are published through an event emitter created using contra
. These events are listed below.
Event | Arguments | Description |
---|---|---|
ready |
[options] |
The calendar has been .restore d |
destroyed |
[] |
The calendar has been .destroy ed |
data |
[value] |
The date may have been updated by the calendar. Value of .getDateString() is provided |
year |
[year] |
The year may have been updated by the calendar. Value of moment.year() is provided |
month |
[month] |
The month may have been updated by the calendar. Value of moment.month() is provided |
day |
[day] |
The day may have been updated by the calendar. Value of moment.date() is provided |
time |
[time] |
The time may have been updated by the calendar. Formatted time string is provided |
show |
[] |
The calendar has been displayed |
hide |
[] |
The calendar has been hidden |
back |
[month] |
The calendar view has been moved back a month to the value moment.month() |
next |
[month] |
The calendar view has been moved forward a month to the value moment.month() |
Please note that dateValidator
and timeValidator
both receive a native Date
object as a parameter. These methods are expected to return undefined
or true
if the date is deemed valid, and false
in case the date is invalid. If dateValidator
returns false
, the validation process will try to find a valid date near the desired date.
If dateValidator
passes for a given date, the timeValidator
will attempt to validate that date as well. If the time is invalid, the day will be probed for a valid time. This validation starts at the desired time, and grows in timeInterval
increments. When the end of the day is reached, validation resumes at the start of the day instead of leaping to the next day.
There are a few default validator factories provided by Rome to make your life easier.
These methods take a moment
, a Date
, a string
that can be parsed into a moment
using inputFormat
, or a DOM element that Rome could use to look up another Rome instance.
If you passed in a DOM element, the validator will look up the associated Rome instance and validate using its value. The first time the validator is executed on any inline calendar, the 'data'
event for that calendar will be hooked to refresh the related calendar.
For usage examples you can refer to the demos.
Returns whether the date is after the provided value. The comparison uses >=
, meaning it's inclusive.
Returns whether the date is after the provided value. The comparison uses >
, meaning it's exclusive.
Returns whether the date is before the provided value. The comparison uses <=
, meaning it's inclusive.
Returns whether the date is before the provided value. The comparison uses <
, meaning it's exclusive.
Returns whether the date is any date except the provided value. You can provide a wide variety of input values. Keep in mind Date
, string
, moment
, and the DOM element used to find another calendar are all valid input types.
If you use rome.val.except('2014-08-09')
, then '2014-08-09'
is invalid.
If you use rome.val.except('2014-08-09', '2014-09-01')
, then anything between '2014-08-09'
and '2014-09-01'
is invalid.
In this case, right
is completely ignored. Every item in the array is treated as follows.
Using rome.val.except(['2014-08-09', '2014-09-01'])
means that '2014-08-09'
and '2014-09-01'
are both invalid dates.
Using rome.val.except([['2014-08-09', '2014-09-01']])
means anything between '2014-08-09'
and '2014-09-01'
is invalid.
These two types of entries can be combined in any way you like. Each entry will exclude additional dates.
For instance, [['2014-04-05', '2014-04-15'], ['2014-04-25', '2014-04-30'], '2014-05-05']
means that April 05 to 15, and April 25 to 30, along with May 05 are all invalid dates.
Identical behavior to rome.val.except
, except for the fact that the selected dates become the only valid dates, rather than the only invalid dates.
Exposes the moment
instance used by Rome. To change the moment
instance, refer to rome.use(moment)
.
Sets the instance of moment
used by Rome.
Start by installing any dependencies.
npm install
Then run the Gulp watch
task.
gulp watch
Lastly open the page and any changes you make just need a browser refresh.
open index.html
MIT