
Research
Security News
Lazarus Strikes npm Again with New Wave of Malicious Packages
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
ember-fullcalendar
Advanced tools
ember-fullcalendar brings the power of FullCalendar and FullCalendar Scheduler to Ember.
This addon works in Ember 1.13.9+ or 2.0+ with no deprecations.
To install it run:
ember install ember-fullcalendar
This addon currently supports every option and callback currently available for FullCalendar 2.0. Please see the FullCalendar documentation for more information.
NOTE: By default, this addon installs and imports both FullCalendar and the FullCalendar Scheduler addon. You may opt out of importing the FullCalendar Scheduler addon if it's not needed.
A simple example:
let events = Ember.A([{
title: 'Event 1',
start: '2016-05-05T07:08:08',
end: '2016-05-05T09:08:08'
}, {
title: 'Event 2',
start: '2016-05-06T07:08:08',
end: '2016-05-07T09:08:08'
}, {
title: 'Event 3',
start: '2016-05-10T07:08:08',
end: '2016-05-10T09:48:08'
}, {
title: 'Event 4',
start: '2016-05-11T07:15:08',
end: '2016-05-11T09:08:08'
}]);
{{full-calendar events=events}}
FullCalendar methods can be called like so:
// app/controllers/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Controller.extend({
actions: {
nextMonth(){
Ember.$('.full-calendar').fullCalendar('next');
}
}
});
Where possible, this addon takes advantage of DDAU (Data Down, Actions Up) to allow your Ember app to interact with FullCalendar from outside of the component. Below are a list of properties that override default FullCalendar properties:
viewName
(replaces defaultView
) - allows you to change the view mode from outside of the component. For example, when using header=false
, you can use your own buttons to modify the viewName
property to change the view of the calendar.
date
(replaces defaultDate
) - allows you to change the date from outside of the component.
All FullCalendar and FullCalendar Scheduler callbacks are supported and can be handled using Ember Actions. Here's a simple example:
Add the component to your template:
// app/templates/application.hbs
{{full-calendar events=events eventClick=(action 'clicked')}}
Add some events:
// app/routes/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
model: function() {
return {
events: Ember.A([{
title: 'Partayyyy', start: new Date()
}])
};
}
});
Register the action in your controller or component:
// app/controllers/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Controller.extend({
actions: {
clicked(event, jsEvent, view){
this.showModal(event);
}
}
});
By default, the FullCalendar Scheduler addon is imported. To opt out, add the following to your application's ember-cli-build.js
:
var app = new EmberApp(defaults, {
emberFullCalendar: {
scheduler: false
}
// Other options here, as needed.
});
By default, the addon uses the Free Trial License Key provided by FullCalendar. If you have a paid license key, you may set it by explicitly passing it into the component as schedulerLicenseKey
or, the better option, is to set it in your config/environment.js
file like so:
emberFullCalendar: {
schedulerLicenseKey: '<your license key>'
}
While not required by ember-fullcalendar
, you may find it helpful to be able to import moment via ES6. Install ember-cli-moment-shims
to enable:
import moment from 'moment';
FAQs
An Ember Component for FullCalendar and FullCalendar Scheduler
The npm package ember-fullcalendar receives a total of 1,431 weekly downloads. As such, ember-fullcalendar popularity was classified as popular.
We found that ember-fullcalendar demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released 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.
Research
Security News
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh discusses the open web, open source security, and how Socket tackles software supply chain attacks on The Pair Program podcast.
Security News
Opengrep continues building momentum with the alpha release of its Playground tool, demonstrating the project's rapid evolution just two months after its initial launch.