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Versatile counters in React
Install with yarn:
yarn add rollex
# or npm:
npm i -S rollex
Counter
component:import { Counter } from 'rollex'
<Counter seconds={98} />
There are multiple ways of setting the time interval to count down (or up) to:
You can tell Rollex how many seconds to count:
<Counter seconds={60} />
Or, you can specify timestamps to count to (and from):
// from now to a given timestamp
<Counter to={1506951918155} />
// from `from` to `to`
<Counter from={1506951900123} to={1506951918155} />
By default, Rollex counters update every second. You can, however, set your own update period via
interval
prop:
// update every 2 seconds
<Counter seconds={60} interval={2000} />
By default, Rollex counters count "down" (from, say, 60 down to 0). You can make a counter go up:
// from 0 to 60
<Counter seconds={60} direction="up" />
Rollex counters are split into periods (days, hours, minutes, seconds). Each period has its own segment, which contains the digits which correspond to a given period.
By default, Rollex counters use four periods: "days", "hours", "minutes", "seconds" and each segment is exactly 2 digits long.
You can control this behaviour:
// show only hours and minutes
<Counter seconds={3600} minPeriod="minutes" maxPeriod="hours" />
// show 3 digits per segment
<Counter seconds={72 * 3600} digits={3} />
You can temporarily (or not) freeze the counter by passing it a frozen
prop:
<Counter seconds={60} frozen />
When frozen
is truthy, the counter will not update at all.
By default, Rollex counters do not try to synchronize time. That means that if a counter is frozen at 59 seconds, and then unfrozen after an hour, it will continue counting down from 59 seconds. If time sync is enabled, the counter will synchronize time and instantly go down to 0.
<Counter seconds={59} syncTime />
By default, Rollex counters are not animated (they look like digital clocks). If you want to enable
animations (make the counters look analog), you should pass the easingFunction
prop (any valid
CSS easing function):
<Counter seconds={59} easingFunction='ease-in-out' />
You can also control animation duration (300 ms by default):
<Counter seconds={59} easingFunction='ease-in-out' easingDuration={500} />
You can even control the radix that Rollex counters use! By default it's 10, but if you want to go dozenal, you can:
<Counter seconds={3600} radix={12} />
If you want to use different symbols for your digits, you can (let's say, you want a dozenal counter with 'X' representing a 10 and 'E' representing an 11):
<Counter seconds={3600} radix={12} digitMap={{
'A': 'X',
'B': 'E',
}} />
You can get even more control over your digits with a digit map:
// use images instead of text for digits
<Counter
seconds={3600}
digitWrapper={digit => <img src={`/digits/${digit}.jpg`} />}
/>
All counter segments can be labelled.
// map from periods to strings
<Counter seconds={141234} labels={{
days: 'days',
hours: 'hours'
}} />
// use a function (use case: pluralisation)
<Counter seconds={123123} labels={(period, number) => {
return number % 10 === 1 ? period.slice(0, -1) : period
}}>
Segments can be separated by a separator symbol:
// dd:hh:mm:ss
<Counter seconds={2312413} separator=':' />
FAQs
A counter React component
The npm package rollex receives a total of 662 weekly downloads. As such, rollex popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that rollex demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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