Research
Security News
Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
ember-power-datepicker
Advanced tools
This addon it's the last member of the Ember Power Project family and it combines ember-basic-dropdown and ember-power-calendar into a single datepicker component that exposes the public APIs of both components as one.
As the components this one is born from, it aims to be flexible and customizable so you can taylor your perfect datepicker. For that it extrictly follows DDAU approach and all its subcomponents can be omitted or replaced by your own.
This addon is in active development so expect some churn. A changelog file will be maintained to surface what changed and when and ease updates.
ember install ember-power-datepicker
If you are using sass, you can import the styles in your app.scss
@import "ember-power-datepicker";
This component doesn't has any style of itself, so the only thing this import is doing is in turn importing the styles of ember-basic-dropdown and ember-power-calendar, so this is just a convenience. If you already use and import the styles of those addons yourself, you don't have to import these.
The API of the component will remind you the APIs of its both parents. It leverages contextual components and most of the options you can pass to the original components are accepted by this addon.
Let's see a basic example:
<PowerDatepicker @selected={{selected}} @onSelect={{action (mut selected) value="date"}} as |dp|>
<dp.Trigger tabindex="-1">
<input type="text" class="my-input-class" readonly value={{moment-format selected}}>
</dp.Trigger>
<dp.Content class="demo-datepicker-small">
<dp.Nav />
<dp.Days />
</dp.Content>
</PowerDatepicker>
The {{dp.trigger}}
and {{dp.content}}
come from ember-basic-dropdown.
You can learn more about them here: https://www.ember-basic-dropdown.com/docs/how-to-use-it
The {{dp.nav}}
and dp.days
components along with the selected
and onSelect
properties
come from ember-power-calendar.
You can learm more about them it here: http://www.ember-power-calendar.com/docs/action-handling
The selected
and onSelect
are the only mandatory options. You can omit them, but if
you do and you don't allow users to select a date, what do you want a datepicker for?
This addon is only tested back to Ember 2.8. It may or may not work in older versions.
Javascript wise the addon should work back to IE10, but CSS wise the default styles use
flexbox, so expect only IE11 support unless you roll out your own template using <table>
,
which you can.
This addon also provides a convenient
datepickerSelect('selector', dateOrMoment)
test helper to interact with the component in tests.
Import this helpers in your tests like this:
import { datepickerSelect } from 'ember-power-datepicker/test-support';
Contributions are welcomes. However if your contribution involves adding a new feature, please open an issue before to share your idea and agree the details of the feature before starting implementing it.
FAQs
An extensible datepicker for Ember
The npm package ember-power-datepicker receives a total of 2,368 weekly downloads. As such, ember-power-datepicker popularity was classified as popular.
We found that ember-power-datepicker demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 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
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.