react-calendar
spectrum-web-components
react-calendar | spectrum-web-components | |
---|---|---|
12 | 15 | |
249 | 1,180 | |
- | 2.0% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
over 6 years ago | about 11 hours ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
react-calendar
- Do you know any react year calendar i could use for free with typescript?
- Stuck trying to use Google Calendar API in React App
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Top 5+ useful ReactJS Plugins for 2023
3. React Calendar
- JetBrains Ring UI
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schedule appointments for my final project
I want to use a Calendar to schedule appointments for my final project. I was using https://www.npmjs.com/package/react-calendar However, I am unable to choose the hour when using this. I also have a hard time disabling the days when an appointment is already scheduled.
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ReactJS - How to style React Calendar
npm install react-calendar but I have no idea how to style it, or to give it some color. The instructions in react-calendar - npm do not provide any information about that. I was wondering if anyone that has used this package could help me here. This is the code I have:
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Tips on how to create a Calendar?
You want this React-Calendar
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Should I learn and use React for this particular MVP?
That seems simple enough to do the MVP with vanilla JS (or jQuery if you really want), but if you go the React route you could leverage packages like React calendar or date pickers for booking that could make your life a lot easier. It’ll also be easier to scale once started since you’ll probably want to use some framework after your MVP is built anyway.
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Enzyme is dead. Now what?
Now, here's the thing. I'm the maintainer of many popular React packages, React-PDF, React-Calendar, and React-Date-Picker just to name a few. Professionally, I maintain several large projects, which collectively have more than 30,000 Enzyme-based unit tests.
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React-Calendar with Custom Styles
I was looking for a calendar to use in a React project and found the React-Calendar component. It has all the functionality that I was looking for and saves me a lot of time from building it out on my own. It can be controlled with state so that the selected date(s) can affect what displays in the app. I wanted to customize its styling to fit my project, so here's what I came up with!
spectrum-web-components
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Making Web Component properties behave closer to the platform
For example, all the following design systems can be used without tooling (some of them provide ready-to-use bundles, others can be used through import maps): Google's Material Web, Microsoft's Fluent UI, IBM's Carbon, Adobe's Spectrum, Nordhealth's Nord, Shoelace, etc.
- I hate CSS: how can I build UIs?
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Painless Web Components: Naming is (not too) Hard
sp- (Spectrum components from Adobe6)
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Cypress component tests for Lit Elements (web components)
Spectrum web components by Adobe is really mature design system that makes a lot of usage of Lit Elements. Their testing setup uses the suggested web test runner. Lit's documentation on testing suggests using that library.
- JetBrains Ring UI
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Exploring The F# Frontend Landscape
In Fable.Lit rather than building an F# DSL (we tried) we use a string-based alternative which is closed to the HTML you know and love, this also helps a lot when you have to consume web components like those from shoelace.style, fast.design, adobe spectrum components, and more, this will be a very important and big point over the next few years now that web components have taken off finally with major companies like Microsoft, Salesforce, Github, Adobe and more are using them.
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Ask HN: Anyone know of any largish applications built with WebComponents?
Oh hey, that me! We at Adobe are investing heavily in web editors built with web component technology. Not just Photoshop, but Illustrator, Lightroom, and a number of brand new or in development applications across the company, as well.
We’re also leveraging web components to support interoperability of our design system across teams who still choose to use frameworks or have been using them all this time. In this way we ship https://opensource.adobe.com/spectrum-web-components/ and teams like fonts.adobe.com that have a long standing Angular app, or edex.adobe.com with their long standing Vue app or various recent acquisitions with their own technical decisions, can all consume Spectrum design without shipping their own implementation or rewriting their app to another stack.
The ease of building at depth scale for large applications and at breadth scale for applications no matter their architectural decisions has been a huge win for Adobe and our goals to drive consistency and quality across the company. The speed and scope at which we’ve been able to do so just wouldn’t be possible without web components.
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Testing Accessibility with Shadow Roots
Recently, I had the opportunity to discuss the difficulties, learnings, and victories or developing Spectrum Web Components together with fellow custom element developers from teams at IBM, ING, SAP, and Vaadin. If you missed the live stream, check out the recording! Fellow panelist, Ari Gilmore, made a great point that there is a lack of reading material for developers like ourselves to draw from when looking to build solid accessibility practices into the web components space. With that in mind, I thought it would be a good idea to take some of the abstract concepts we discussed in the panel and share some actual examples of working and testable code. Hopefully, this can better support the next developer(s) looking to bring a high-quality, accessible, design system to life for their team via web components.
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[AskJS] Javascript methodology/library/pattern for plain HTML Design System components
Their repos are public: - https://github.com/adobe/spectrum-web-components - https://github.com/adobe/react-spectrum
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Who doesn't love some `<slot/>`s?
It does seem like I enjoy a good . I mean, look, I wrote about them all the way back in 2018 in ing in Some Tips, and then in 2020, I spoke about Stacked Slots at a virtual Web Components SF meetup (see the associated slides), before sharing a proof of concept for Light DOM as Model. And, as if that weren't enough, here we are again, and I'm writing to you, friend, about s. Today, we're going to get out of the theoretical and into the practical as we start on the path towards actual usage of Stacked Slots that I'm excited to bring to life as part of Adobe's Spectrum Web Components to support the delivery of Spectrum design's Help Text pattern.
What are some alternatives?
react-big-calendar - gcal/outlook like calendar component
shoelace-css - A collection of professionally designed, every day UI components built on Web standards. SHOELACE IS BECOMING WEB AWESOME. WE ARE LIVE ON KICKSTARTER! 👇👇👇
react-datepicker - A simple and reusable datepicker component for React
fast - The adaptive interface system for modern web experiences.
react-daterange-picker
lwc - ⚡️ LWC - A Blazing Fast, Enterprise-Grade Web Components Foundation
react-day-picker - DayPicker is a customizable date picker component for React. Add date pickers, calendars, and date inputs to your web applications.
wired-elements - Collection of custom elements that appear hand drawn. Great for wireframes or a fun look.
react-dates - An easily internationalizable, mobile-friendly datepicker library for the web
material-web - Material Design Web Components
react-date-range - A React component for choosing dates and date ranges.
vaadin - An evolving set of open source web components for building mobile and desktop web applications in modern browsers.