ember-pikaday is an addon that can be installed with Ember CLI. It gives you a datepicker input component that can be used in your Ember.js application. Pikaday and Moment.js are used in the background so they are added as Bower dependencies to your application.
The component provided by ember-pikaday is fully acceptance tested. It also provides test helpers to interact with the datepicker in your own acceptance tests.
cd your-project-directory
ember install:addon ember-pikaday
While the input shows a formatted date to the user the bound attribute is always a JavaScript date object. If the application sets the attribute without a user interaction the datepicker updates accordingly.
You can also change the default format from DD.MM.YYYY
to any format string supported by Moment.js.
You can change the yearRange
. It defaults to 10. the yearRange
can be a
single number or two comma separated years.
If the second year of the comma separated years is set to currentYear
, it sets
the maximum selectable year to the current year.
The readonly
attribute is supported as binding so you can make the input readonly for mobile or other usecases.
The date returned by ember-pikaday is in your local time zone due to the JavaScript default behaviour of new Date()
. This can lead to problems when your application converts the date to UTC. In additive time zones (e.g. +0010) the resulting converted date could be yesterdays date. You can force the component to return a date with the UTC time zone by passing useUTC=true
to it.
ember-pikaday will not automatically convert the date to UTC if your application is setting the datepicker value directly!
Localizing the datepicker is possible in two steps. To localize the output of the datepicker, this is the formatted string visible in the input field, you simply add the correct Moment.js locale file to your applications Brocfile.js
.
If I want to use the Austrian / German locale for example, my Brocfile.js
will look like this. To use another locale you only have to change de-at.js
to whatever locale you want to use.
app.import('bower_components/moment/moment.js');
app.import('bower_components/moment/locale/de-at.js');
app.import('bower_components/pikaday/pikaday.js');
app.import('bower_components/pikaday/css/pikaday.css');
To localize the datepicker itself, this is the popup you see after clicking the input, a little more work is necessary. The prefered way to do this is writting a custom initializer to inject a localized i18n
object into the datepicker component. Naturaly you can use your own localized strings instead of the ones provided by Moment.js.
// app/initializers/setup-pikaday-i18n.js
/* globals moment */
import Ember from 'ember';
export default {
name: 'setup-pikaday-i18n',
initialize: function(container, application) {
var i18n = Ember.Object.extend({
previousMonth: 'Vorheriger Monat',
nextMonth: 'Nächster Monat',
months: moment.localeData()._months,
weekdays: moment.localeData()._weekdays,
weekdaysShort: moment.localeData()._weekdaysShort
});
container.register('pikaday-i18n:main', i18n, { singleton: true });
application.inject('component:pikaday-input', 'i18n', 'pikaday-i18n:main');
}
};
The test helpers provided by ember-pikaday allow you to interact with the datepicker in your acceptance tests. After importing them you are ready to rock and roll.
import { openDatepicker } from 'ember-pikaday/helpers/pikaday';
To open the datepicker use openDatepicker
and pass the input element as argument.
openDatepicker(Ember.$('#my-datepicker'));
openDatepicker
not only opens the datepicker but also returns an interactor that can be used to interact with it. For example you can select a specific date by using selectDate
.
var interactor = openDatepicker(Ember.$('#my-datepicker'));
interactor.selectDate(new Date(1989, 3, 28));
To check if a specific day, month or year is selected there are also relevant methods available.
var interactor = openDatepicker(Ember.$('#my-datepicker'));
interactor.selectDate(new Date(1989, 3, 28));
equal(interactor.selectedYear(), 1989);
equal(interactor.selectedMonth(), 3);
equal(interactor.selectedDay(), 28);