React Calendar
100% test coverage, responsive, and flexible event calendar for React.
See In Action
Backstory: After using react-big-calendar for years, I decided to create my own that is simpler to use, allows for easy customization, and uses modern React (no deprecated methods).
npm install @zach.codes/react-calendar date-fns
Basic Usage
See this code in action
import { format, subHours, startOfMonth } from 'date-fns';
import {
MonthlyBody,
MonthlyDay,
MonthlyCalendar,
MonthlyNav,
DefaultMonthlyEventItem,
} from '@zach.codes/react-calendar';
export const MyMonthlyCalendar = () => {
let [currentMonth, setCurrentMonth] = useState<Date>(
startOfMonth(new Date())
);
return (
<MonthlyCalendar
currentMonth={currentMonth}
onCurrentMonthChange={date => setCurrentMonth(date)}
>
<MonthlyNav />
<MonthlyBody
events={[
{ title: 'Call John', date: subHours(new Date(), 2) },
{ title: 'Call John', date: subHours(new Date(), 1) },
{ title: 'Meeting with Bob', date: new Date() },
]}
>
<MonthlyDay<EventType>
renderDay={data =>
data.map((item, index) => (
<DefaultMonthlyEventItem
key={index}
title={item.title}
// Format the date here to be in the format you prefer
date={format(item.date, 'k:mm')}
/>
))
}
/>
</MonthlyBody>
</MonthlyCalendar>
);
};
This renders a monthly calendar view in its simplest form. Whenever a user presses next
or previous
on the <MonthlyNav />
the onCurrentMonthChange
callback will be invoked, and it's up to you to control the state.
This approach gives you full flexibilty to do anything you want. In my applications, I will refetch a graphql query anytime the month changes, and load events
for that month.
The events get passed into MonthlyBody
and then renderDay
is called for every day on the calendar that has events. You can render any React component you wish, giving you as much freedom as possible.
Styling
This library uses Tailwind. This gives you two options for including the necessary CSS for the components.
I'm already using Tailwind
Awesome! You need to add node_modules/@zach.codes/react-calendar/dist/**/*.js
to your tailwind.config.js
to ensure the required classes aren't purged on your production build.
I'm not using Tailwind
No problem! The library includes the minimal CSS required to render the components. Somewhere in your app, you need to import our CSS:
import '@zach.codes/react-calendar/dist/calendar-tailwind.css';
If you already have a CSS reset in your app, you can import from:
import '@zach.codes/react-calendar/dist/calendar-tailwind-no-reset.css';
But some styles may not look the same as storybook. You can take the resets you want from the main file and put them into your app to get the styling you prefer.
MonthlyCalendar
This is a monthly view similar to react-big-calendar or a Calendar application. It makes it easy to load events 1 month at a time, and render custom elements on each day.
See in action
Props
MonthlyCalendar
currentMonth
this must be a Date instance representing the first of the month you wish to viewonCurrentMonthChange
is called any time the month is changing from the Navigation area
MonthlyNav
No props at this time
MonthlyBody
omitDays
lets you hide certain days from the calendar, for instance, hide Saturday and Sunday. Days are represented as 0-6, as seen in the date-fns documentation. Hiding Monday would be omitDays={[1]}
Hiding the weekend would be omitDays={[0, 6]}
events
this is an array of events, the only thing required inside each object is a date
field with a Date object representing the exact time of the event
MonthlyDay
renderDay
callback function that is passed an array of events for each day displayed, letting you render the events for the day
WeeklyCalendar
View 1 week at a time, useful for scheduling appointments, or rendering events in a smaller area of the screen
See in action
<WeeklyCalendar week={new Date()}>
<WeeklyContainer>
<WeeklyDays />
<WeeklyBody
events={[{ title: 'Jane doe', date: new Date() }]}
renderItem={({ item, showingFullWeek }) => (
<DefaultWeeklyEventItem
key={item.date.toISOString()}
title={item.title}
date={
showingFullWeek
? format(item.date, 'MMM do k:mm')
: format(item.date, 'k:mm')
}
/>
)}
/>
</WeeklyContainer>
</WeeklyCalendar>
This code renders an event for the current date. When you are in the week view, it displays the day and time. When you drill into a single day, it displays the time only.
Props
WeeklyCalendar
week
a date object to initialize for the weekly view
WeeklyContainer
A view only component to flex the buttons and content area
WeeklyDays
Renders the buttons to view an individual day
omitDays
, same as the MonthlyBody
prop
WeeklyBody
style
optional style info for setting the container heightevents
array of events with a date field, and anything else you want.renderItem
callback to render individual items on the side.
Full Control
This library has very few props to understand. It takes a component-first approach instead of endless prop options.
Building a calendar is highly opinionated. This library lets you easily customize any piece of it. Let's take a look at the MonthlyNav
component:
import { useMonthlyCalendar } from '@zach.codes/react-calendar';
export const MonthlyNav = () => {
let { currentMonth, onCurrentMonthChange } = useMonthlyCalendar();
return (
<div className="flex justify-end mb-4">
<button
onClick={() => onCurrentMonthChange(subMonths(currentMonth, 1))}
className="cursor-pointer"
>
Previous
</button>
<div className="ml-4 mr-4 w-32 text-center">
{format(
currentMonth,
getYear(currentMonth) === getYear(new Date()) ? 'LLLL' : 'LLLL yyyy'
)}
</div>
<button
onClick={() => onCurrentMonthChange(addMonths(currentMonth, 1))}
className="cursor-pointer"
>
Next
</button>
</div>
);
};
It's rendering some button elements, and then the current month. If it's not the current year, it renders the year as well.
You can copy / paste this component into your own repo. The magic piece is useMonthlyCalendar
. This hook will let you access anything from the calendar context.
With this in mind, you can fully replace any of the default components to have custom behavior for your own app.