/vue2-timepicker

A dropdown time picker (hour|minute|second) for Vue 2.x, with flexible time format support

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Vue2 Time Picker

A dropdown time picker (hour|minute|second) for Vue 2.x, with flexible time format support.

Looking for the Vue 1.x version? Please check the vue-timepicker (Vue 1.x supported)

Demo

You can see the Vue2 Timepicker in action in the Demo Page

Migration

Migrating from the Vue 1.x version? Please check MIGRATION.md for basic guidelines.

Dependencies

Vue.js v2.0+

Installation

Through NPM (Recommended)

npm install vue2-timepicker --save

Bower

bower install vue2-timepicker --save

Get Started

Step 1: Import VueTimepicker

A: Include the single file component (Recommended)

// import
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker'

// Or, require
var VueTimepicker = require('vue2-timepicker')

or, B: Include distribution files with <script> and <style>

<script src="yourpath/vue/dist/vue.min.js"></script>
<script src="yourpath/vue2-timepicker/dist/vue2-timepicker.min.js"></script>

<link href="yourpath/vue2-timepicker/dist/vue2-timepicker.min.css" rel="stylesheet"></link>

NOTE: When using the dist files, a Vue.use() call is needed

// Work with <script> block
Vue.use(window.VueTimepicker)

// Else
Vue.use(VueTimepicker)

Step 2: Include VueTimepicker in your component

var yourComponent = new Vue({
  components: { VueTimepicker },
  ...
})

Step 3: Then, you can introduce the vue-timepicker tag anywhere you like in your component's template

<vue-timepicker></vue-timepicker>

Usage

Basic Usage

<!-- Default to 24-Hour format HH:mm -->
<vue-timepicker></vue-timepicker>

Customized Time Format

<!-- Show seconds picker -->
<vue-timepicker format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>

<!-- 12-hour format, with AM/PM picker -->
<vue-timepicker format="hh:mm A"></vue-timepicker>

<!-- 12-hour format, with seconds picker and am/pm picker -->
<vue-timepicker format="hh:mm:ss a"></vue-timepicker>

VueTimepicker will recognizes the following tokens in the format string

Section Token Output
AM/PM A AM PM
a am pm
Hour H 0 1 ... 22 23
HH 00 01 ... 22 23
h 1 2 ... 11 12
hh 01 02 ... 11 12
k 1 2 ... 23 24
kk 01 02 ... 23 24
Minute m 0 1 ... 58 59
mm 00 01 ... 58 59
Second s 0 1 ... 58 59
ss 00 01 ... 58 59

If not set, format string will be default to "HH:mm"

Customized Picker interval

<!-- Show minute picker's value in the form of 0, 5, 10, ... 55, 60 -->
<vue-timepicker :minute-interval="5"></vue-timepicker>

<!-- Show second picker's value in the form of 0, 10, 20, ... 50, 60 -->
<vue-timepicker :second-interval="10"></vue-timepicker>

<!-- Bind interval config with your own data variable -->
<vue-timepicker :minute-interval="yourMinuteInterval"></vue-timepicker>

Note: Please do remember to add the : or v-bind: sign before the interval properties

Hide Clear Button

<vue-timepicker hide-clear-button></vue-timepicker>

Bind Value with v-model

// e.g. If you want to assign "10:05:00" as the initial value of vue-timepicker
var yourComponent = new Vue({
  components: { VueTimepicker },
  data: function () {
    return {
      yourTimeValue: {
        HH: "10",
        mm: "05",
        ss: "00"
      },
      ...
    }
  },
  ...
})
<!-- HTML -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>

Get Time Picker's Current Value

Method 1: Read value from v-model

<!-- In the last section, we've set the initial value (yourTimeValue) to "10:05:00" -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>
// Then, open the dropdown picker and pick a new time.
// Like setting to "14:30:15" for example
// Check the value after that
console.log(this.yourTimeValue)
// outputs -> {HH: "14", mm: "30", ss: "15"}

Method 2: Add @change event handler

<!-- A: No argument -->
<vue-timepicker :time-value.sync="yourTimeValue" @change="changeHandler"></vue-timepicker>

<!-- B: Custom arguments -->
<vue-timepicker :time-value.sync="yourTimeValue" @change="otherChangeHandler($event, 'foo', 'bar')"></vue-timepicker>
// A: No argument
changeHandler (eventData) {
  console.log(eventData)
  // -> {data: {HH:..., mm:... }}
}

// B: Custom arguments
otherChangeHandler (eventData, yourArg1, yourArg2) {
  console.log(eventData)
  // -> {data: {HH:..., mm:... }}
  console.log(yourArg1)
  // -> 'foo'
  console.log(yourArg2)
  // -> 'bar'
}

Unlike v-model, which only returns the defined time tokens you provided in the binding variable, the change event will return all supported formats.

In the example above, when picker is set to "14:30:15" in HH:mm:ss format, change event will return the following data:

// `@change` event data
{
  HH: "14",
  H: "14",
  hh: "14",
  a: "am",
  A: "AM",
  h: "14",
  kk: "14",
  k: "14",
  m: "30",
  mm: "30",
  s: "15",
  ss: "15"
}

Whereas the v-model will only return the data with defined tokens

// Previously defined variable (`yourTimeValue` in this case) as {HH:..., mm:..., ss:...}
// Hence, the `v-model` returns:
{
  HH: "14",
  mm: "30",
  ss: "15"
}

Props API

Prop Type Required Default Value
v-model Object no undefined
format String no "HH:mm"
minute-interval Number no undefined
second-interval Number no undefined
hide-clear-button Boolean no false
disabled Boolean no undefined
disabledValues Object no { hours: [], minute: [], second: [], apm: [] }

Contribution

Please feel free to fork and help developing.

# install dependencies
npm install

# serve with hot reload at localhost:8080
npm run dev

For detailed explanation on how things work, checkout the webpack guide and docs for vue-loader.

Change Log

Detail changes for each release are documented in CHANGELOG.md

License

MIT