A light-weight date picker with zero dependencies.
- Zero dependencies
- Roughly 3.5KB minified and gzipped
- IE9+
- Mobile-friendly/responsive
- Supports multiple languages
npm install --save tiny-date-picker
Include a reference to tiny-date-picker.css
and tiny-date-picker.js
, or import
it import TinyDatePicker from 'tiny-date-picker';
then call it like this:
// Initialize a date picker on the specified input element
TinyDatePicker(document.querySelector('input'));
// Or with a CSS selector
TinyDatePicker('.some-class-or-id-or-whatever');
You can also pass in options as an optional second argument:
// Initialize a date picker using truncated month names
TinyDatePicker(document.querySelector('input'), {
lang: {
months: ['Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'],
},
});
The DatePicker context is returned from the TinyDatePicker
function, and can be used to
manipulate the date picker as documented below:
// Initialize a date picker on the specified input element
const dp = TinyDatePicker('input');
// Show the date picker
dp.open();
// Hide the date picker (does nothing if the date picker is in permanent mode)
dp.close();
// Get the current view of the date picker. Possible values are:
// - 'day': The calendar is showing the day picker (the default)
// - 'month': The calendar is showing the month picker
// - 'year': The calendar is showing the year picker
dp.state.view;
// Get the currently selected date (can be null)
dp.state.selectedDate;
// Get the currently hilighted date (should not be null)
dp.state.hilightedDate;
// Add an event handler
dp.on('statechange', (_, picker) => console.log(picker.state));
// Remove all event handlers (see the Events section for more information)
dp.off();
// Update the date picker's state and redraw as necessary.
// This example causes the date picker to show the month-picker view.
// You can use setStsate to change the selectedDate or hilightedDate as well.
dp.setState({
view: 'month',
});
// Close the date picker and remove all event handlers from the input
dp.destroy()
TinyDatePicker can be configured by passing it a second argument:
TinyDatePicker('input', {
// What dom element the date picker will be added to. This defaults
// to document.body
appendTo: document.querySelector('.foo'),
// Lang can be used to customize the text that is displayed
// in the calendar. You can use this to display a different language.
lang: {
days: ['Sun', 'Mon', 'Tue', 'Wed', 'Thu', 'Fri', 'Sat'],
months: [
'January',
'February',
'March',
'April',
'May',
'June',
'July',
'August',
'September',
'October',
'November',
'December',
],
today: 'Today',
clear: 'Clear',
close: 'Close',
},
// format {Date} -> string is a function which takes a date and returns a string. It can be used to customize
// the way a date will look in the input after the user has selected it, and is particularly
// useful if you're targeting a non-US customer.
format(date) {
return date.toLocaleDateString();
},
// parse {string|Date} -> Date is the inverse of format. If you specify one, you probably should specify the other
// the default parse function handles whatever the new Date constructor handles. Note that
// parse may be passed either a string or a date.
parse(str) {
var date = new Date(str);
return isNaN(date) ? new Date() : date;
},
// mode {'dp-modal'|'dp-below'|'dp-permanent'} specifies the way the date picker should display:
// 'dp-modal' displays the picker as a modal
// 'dp-below' displays the date picker as a dropdown
// 'dp-permanent' displays the date picker as a permanent (always showing) calendar
mode: 'dp-modal',
// hilightedDate specifies what date to hilight when the date picker is displayed and the
// associated input has no value.
hilightedDate: new Date(),
// min {string|Date} specifies the minimum date that can be selected (inclusive).
// All earlier dates will be disabled.
min: '10/1/2016',
// max {string|Date} specifies the maximum date that can be selected (inclusive).
// All later dates will be disabled.
max: '10/1/2020',
// inRange {Date} -> boolean takes a date and returns true or false. If false, the date
// will be disabled in the date picker.
inRange(dt) {
return dt.getFullYear() % 2 > 0;
},
// dateClass {Date} -> string takes a date and returns a CSS class name to be associated
// with that date in the date picker.
dateClass(dt) {
return dt.getFullYear() % 2 ? 'odd-date' : 'even-date';
},
// dayOffset {number} specifies which day of the week is considered the first. By default,
// this is 0 (Sunday). Set it to 1 for Monday, 2 for Tuesday, etc.
dayOffset: 1
})
The input to which the date picker is attached will fire its change
event
any time the date value changes.
The DatePicker object has an on
and off
method which allows you to register and unregister various event handlers.
- open: Fired when the date picker opens / is shown
- close: Fired when the date picker closes / is hidden
- statechange: Fired when the date picker's state changes (view changes, hilighted date changes, selected date changes)
- select: Fired when hte date picker's selected date changes (e.g. when the user picks a date)
The event handler is passed two arguments: the name of the event, and the date picker object.
// Log the selected date any time it changes
TinyDatePicker('.my-input')
.on('select', (_, dp) => console.log(dp.state.selectedDate))
.on('close', () => console.log('CLOSED!!!'));
// You can also register for multiple events at once without chaining the on method:
TinyDatePicker('.my-input')
.on({
select: (_, dp) => console.log(dp.state.selectedDate),
close: () => console.log('CLOSED!!!')
});
To remove an event handler, you call the date picker's off
method.
const dp = TinyDatePicker('.example');
function onOpen() {
console.log('OPENED!!!');
}
dp.on('open', onOpen);
// Remove this specific open event handler
dp.off('open', onOpen);
// Remove all handlers of the open event
dp.off('open');
// Remove all handlers of any event
dp.off();
All CSS class names begin with dp-
, and every element in the calendar has a class. The style rules
in tiny-date-picker.css
have been kept as unspecific as possible so they can be easily overruled.
For more info, launch a date picker and use the browser dev tools to inspect its structure and shape.
There is currently no Aria support baked into Tiny Date Picker, but it is planned.
This library is CommonJS compatible, so you can use it in this way:
var TinyDatePicker = require('tiny-date-picker'),
TinyDatePicker('.my-input');
Or, with ES6:
import TinyDatePicker from 'tiny-date-picker',
TinyDatePicker('.my-input');
If you want to pick date ranges, see DateRangePicker.
If you're using version 2.x, the docs are here.
Migration to 3.x is documented here.
TinyDatePicker supports IE9+, and does so without need for a transpiler (Babel or TypeScript). So when contributing, be sure to write plain old vanilla ES3.
Make sure all tests are passing:
- Put the Chrome webdriver somewhere in your path.
- Run
npm start
- In a new terminal tab/window, run
npm test
If all is well, build your changes:
npm run min