Security News
PyPI’s New Archival Feature Closes a Major Security Gap
PyPI now allows maintainers to archive projects, improving security and helping users make informed decisions about their dependencies.
@allchats/react-compound-timer
Advanced tools
Timer compound component for react and react-native to make building timers less painfull. It incapsulates all timer logic - you should only think about rendering!
Just render a simple timer and start counting forward from 0. Use compound components to render time units. You can see all avaliable time units in this example.
<Timer>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</Timer>
The same simple timer, but counting backward.
<Timer
initialTime={55000}
direction="backward"
>
{() => (
<React.Fragment>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
Get action functions from props and use them to control your timer.
<Timer
initialTime={55000}
>
{({ start, resume, pause, stop, reset, timerState }) => (
<React.Fragment>
<div>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</div>
<div>{timerState}</div>
<br />
<div>
<button onClick={start}>Start</button>
<button onClick={pause}>Pause</button>
<button onClick={resume}>Resume</button>
<button onClick={stop}>Stop</button>
<button onClick={reset}>Reset</button>
</div>
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
You can just render a timer, and then start it only by using action function 'start' from props.
<Timer
initialTime={55000}
startImmediately={false}
>
{({ start, resume, pause, stop, reset, timerState }) => (
<React.Fragment>
<div>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</div>
<div>{timerState}</div>
<br />
<div>
<button onClick={start}>Start</button>
<button onClick={pause}>Pause</button>
<button onClick={resume}>Resume</button>
<button onClick={stop}>Stop</button>
<button onClick={reset}>Reset</button>
</div>
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
Write your own hooks on timer actions.
<Timer
initialTime={55000}
startImmediately={false}
onStart={() => console.log('onStart hook')}
onResume={() => console.log('onResume hook')}
onPause={() => console.log('onPause hook')}
onStop={() => console.log('onStop hook')}
onReset={() => console.log('onReset hook')}
>
{({ start, resume, pause, stop, reset, timerState }) => (
<React.Fragment>
<div>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</div>
<div>{timerState}</div>
<br />
<div>
<button onClick={start}>Start</button>
<button onClick={pause}>Pause</button>
<button onClick={resume}>Resume</button>
<button onClick={stop}>Stop</button>
<button onClick={reset}>Reset</button>
</div>
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
Control your last unit. For example, 1 minute 30 seconds can be 90 seconds, if you set lastUnit as 'seconds'. It means that minutes, hours and days will not be computed.
<Timer
initialTime={60000 * 60 * 48 + 5000}
lastUnit="h"
direction="backward"
>
{() => (
<React.Fragment>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
If you need to call some functions on certain time - provide checkpoints property. It is an array of objects. Each object contains time and callback, that will be fired, when timer intersects checkpoint's time.
<Timer
initialTime={60000 * 60 * 48 + 5000}
direction="backward"
checkpoints={[
{
time: 60000 * 60 * 48,
callback: () => console.log('Checkpoint A'),
},
{
time: 60000 * 60 * 48 - 5000,
callback: () => console.log('Checkpoint B'),
}
]}
>
{() => (
<React.Fragment>
<Timer.Days /> days
<Timer.Hours /> hours
<Timer.Minutes /> minutes
<Timer.Seconds /> seconds
<Timer.Milliseconds /> milliseconds
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Timer>
Timer compound component also works for react-native applications. All you have to do is wrap the elements in a tag from react-native.
import { View, Text } from 'react-native'
import Timer from 'react-compound-timer'
<View style={{ flex: 1, justifyContent: 'center', alignItems: 'center' }}>
<Timer
initialTime={60 * 1000}
direction="backward"
timeToUpdate={10}
checkpoints={[
{
time: 0,
callback: () => alert('countdown finished'),
},
]}
>
<Text style={{ fontFamily: 'Helvetica Neue' }}>
<Text style={{ fontSize: 32 }}>
<Timer.Seconds />
</Text>
<Text style={{ fontSize: 12 }}>
<Timer.Milliseconds />
</Text>
</Text>
</Timer>
</View>
FAQs
Timer compound react component
We found that @allchats/react-compound-timer demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
PyPI now allows maintainers to archive projects, improving security and helping users make informed decisions about their dependencies.
Research
Security News
Malicious npm package postcss-optimizer delivers BeaverTail malware, targeting developer systems; similarities to past campaigns suggest a North Korean connection.
Security News
CISA's KEV data is now on GitHub, offering easier access, API integration, commit history tracking, and automated updates for security teams and researchers.