Chronosify is designed to do one thing really really well: render a calendar. It lets you render a calendar of any size. Maybe you want a day view, a 4 day agenda, a week view, a month view, or a 6 week calendar. You can do all of that with the new gem, just give it a range of dates to render.
It doesn't depend on any ORM so you're free to use it with ActiveRecord, Mongoid, any other ORM, or pure Ruby objects.
Just add this into your Gemfile followed by a bundle install:
gem 'chronosify', :git => 'http://github.com/Devagnos/Chronosify', branch: 'master'
Generating calendars is extremely simple with chronosify.
The first parameter is a symbol that looks up the current date in
params
. If no date is found, it will use the current date.
In these examples, we're using :start_date
which is the default.
You can generate a calendar for the month with the month_calendar
method.
<%= month_calendar do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
You can generate a week calendar with the week_calendar
method.
<%= week_calendar number_of_weeks: 2 do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
Setting number_of_weeks
is optional and defaults to 1.
You can generate calendars of any length by passing in the number of days you want to render.
<%= calendar number_of_days: 4 do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
Setting number_of_days
is optional and defaults to 4.
You can set a different partial name for calendars by passing the partial path.
<%= calendar partial: 'products/calendar' do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
Setting number_of_days
is optional and defaults to 4.
What's a calendar without events in it? There are two simple steps for creating calendars with events.
The first step is to add the following to your model. We'll be using a model called Meeting, but you can add this to any model or Ruby object.
Here's an example model:
# single day events
$ rails g scaffold Meeting name start_time:datetime
# multi-day events
$ rails g scaffold Meeting name start_time:datetime end_time:datetime
By default it uses start_time
as the attribute name. Optionally the end_time
attribute can be used which enables multi-day event rendering.
If you'd like to use another attribute other than start_time or end_time, just
pass it in as the attribute
or end_attribute
options respectively
<%= month_calendar(attribute: :starts_at) do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
If you already have a model with a start time attribute called something other than start_time
or accesses it through a relationship, you can alias the attribute by defining a start_time
method in the my_model.rb file and not have to specify it separately as in the above example
class MyModel
## Other code related to your model lives here
def start_time
self.my_related_model.start ##Where 'start' is a attribute of type 'Date' accessible through MyModel's relationship
end
end
In your controller, query for these meetings and store them in an instance variable. Normally you'll want to search for the ones that only show up inside the calendar view (for example, you may only want to grab the events for the current month).
We'll just load up all the meetings for this example.
def index
@meetings = Meeting.all
end
Then in your view, you can pass in the events
option to render. The
meetings will automatically be filtered out by day for you.
<%= month_calendar events: @meetings do |date, meetings| %>
<%= date %>
<% meetings.each do |meeting| %>
<div>
<%= meeting.name %>
</div>
<% end %>
<% end %>
If you pass in objects that don't respond to the attribute method (like starts_at), then all the meetings will be yielded each day. This lets you do custom filtering however you want.
There are a handful of configuration options that you can use in chronosify.
You can customize the layouts for each of the calendars by running the generators for chronosify:
$ rails g chronosify:views
This will generate a folder in app/views called chronosify that you edit to your heart's desire.
Setting Time.zone
will make sure the calendar start days are correctly computed
in the right timezone. You can set this globally in your application.rb
file or
if you have a User model with a time_zone attribute, you can set it on every request by using
a before_filter like the following example.
This code example uses Devise's
current_user
and user_signed_in?
methods to retrieve the user's timezone and set it for the duration of the request.
Make sure to change the :user_signed_in?
and current_user
methods if you are
using some other method of authentication.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
before_filter :set_time_zone, if: :user_signed_in?
private
def set_time_zone
Time.zone = current_user.time_zone
end
end
If you want to set the time zone globally, you can set the following in
config/application.rb
:
config.time_zone = 'Central Time (US & Canada)'
You can also change the beginning day of the week by setting
Date.beginning_of_week
in a before_filter
just like in the previous
example. If you want to set this globally, you can put this line in
config/application.rb
:
config.beginning_of_week = :sunday
If you're using Bootstrap, the calendar should already have a border and nice spacing for days.
Optionally, you can include the default stylesheet for the calendar in
your app/assets/stylesheets/application.css
file:
*= require chronosify
Setting classes on the table and elements are pretty easy.
chronosify comes with a handful of useful classes for each day in the calendar that you can use:
.simple-calendar {
.day {}
.wday-0 {}
.wday-1 {}
.wday-2 {}
.wday-3 {}
.wday-4 {}
.wday-5 {}
.wday-6 {}
.today {}
.past {}
.future {}
.start-date {}
.prev-month {}
.next-month { }
.current-month {}
.has-events {}
}
Just paste this into a CSS file and add your styles and they will be applied to the calendar. All of these classes are inside of the simple-calendar class so you can scope your own classes with similar names.
Header and title links are easily adjusted by generating views and modifying them inside your application.
For example, if you'd like to use abbreviated month names, you can modify the views from this:
<%= t('date.month_names')[start_date.month] %> <%= start_date.year %>
To
<%= t('date.abbr_month_names')[start_date.month] %> <%= start_date.year %>
Your calendar will now display "Sep 2015" instead of "September 2015" at the top! :)
The three main calendars available should take care of most of your needs, but chronosify makes it easy to create completely custom calendars (like maybe you only want business weeks).
If you'd like to make a completely custom calendar, you can create a new
class that inherits from Chronosify::Calendar
. The name you give
it will correspond to the name of the template it will try to render.
The main method you'll need to implement is the date_range
so that
your calendar can have a custom length.
class Chronosify::BusinessWeekCalendar
private
def date_range
beginning = start_date.beginning_of_week + 1.day
ending = start_date.end_of_week - 1.day
(beginning..ending).to_a
end
end
To render this in the view, you can do:
<%= Chronosify::BusinessWeekCalendar.new(self).render do |date| %>
<%= date %>
<% end %>
And this will render the
app/views/chronosify/_business_week_calendar.html.erb
partial.
You can copy one of the existing templates to use for the partial for your new calendar.
Slim [email protected]