2015-03-17 02:48:57 -08:00

156 lines
4.4 KiB
JavaScript

/**
* Copyright 2004-present Facebook. All Rights Reserved.
*
* @providesModule DatePickerIOS
*
* This is a controlled component version of RCTDatePickerIOS
*/
'use strict';
var NativeMethodsMixin = require('NativeMethodsMixin');
var PropTypes = require('ReactPropTypes');
var React = require('React');
var ReactIOSViewAttributes = require('ReactIOSViewAttributes');
var RCTDatePickerIOSConsts = require('NativeModules').RCTUIManager.RCTDatePicker.Constants;
var StyleSheet = require('StyleSheet');
var View = require('View');
var createReactIOSNativeComponentClass =
require('createReactIOSNativeComponentClass');
var merge = require('merge');
var DATEPICKER = 'datepicker';
/**
* Use `DatePickerIOS` to render a date/time picker (selector) on iOS. This is
* a controlled component, so you must hook in to the `onDateChange` callback
* and update the `date` prop in order for the component to update, otherwise
* the user's change will be reverted immediately to reflect `props.date` as the
* source of truth.
*/
var DatePickerIOS = React.createClass({
mixins: [NativeMethodsMixin],
propTypes: {
/**
* The currently selected date.
*/
date: PropTypes.instanceOf(Date).isRequired,
/**
* Date change handler.
*
* This is called when the user changes the date or time in the UI.
* The first and only argument is a Date object representing the new
* date and time.
*/
onDateChange: PropTypes.func.isRequired,
/**
* Maximum date.
*
* Restricts the range of possible date/time values.
*/
maximumDate: PropTypes.instanceOf(Date),
/**
* Minimum date.
*
* Restricts the range of possible date/time values.
*/
minimumDate: PropTypes.instanceOf(Date),
/**
* The date picker mode.
*
* Valid modes on iOS are: 'date', 'time', 'datetime'.
*/
mode: PropTypes.oneOf(Object.keys(RCTDatePickerIOSConsts.DatePickerModes)),
/**
* The interval at which minutes can be selected.
*/
minuteInterval: PropTypes.oneOf([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30]),
/**
* Timezone offset in seconds.
*
* By default, the date picker will use the device's timezone. With this
* parameter, it is possible to force a certain timezone offset. For
* instance, to show times in Pacific Standard Time, pass -7 * 60.
*/
timeZoneOffsetInMinutes: PropTypes.number,
},
getDefaultProps: function() {
return {
mode: 'datetime',
};
},
_onChange: function(event) {
var nativeTimeStamp = event.nativeEvent.timestamp;
this.props.onDateChange && this.props.onDateChange(
new Date(nativeTimeStamp)
);
this.props.onChange && this.props.onChange(event);
// We expect the onChange* handlers to be in charge of updating our `date`
// prop. That way they can also disallow/undo/mutate the selection of
// certain values. In other words, the embedder of this component should
// be the source of truth, not the native component.
var propsTimeStamp = this.props.date.getTime();
if (nativeTimeStamp !== propsTimeStamp) {
this.refs[DATEPICKER].setNativeProps({
date: propsTimeStamp,
});
}
},
render: function() {
var props = this.props;
return (
<View style={props.style}>
<RCTDatePickerIOS
ref={DATEPICKER}
style={styles.rkDatePickerIOS}
date={props.date.getTime()}
maximumDate={
props.maximumDate ? props.maximumDate.getTime() : undefined
}
minimumDate={
props.minimumDate ? props.minimumDate.getTime() : undefined
}
mode={RCTDatePickerIOSConsts.DatePickerModes[props.mode]}
minuteInterval={props.minuteInterval}
timeZoneOffsetInMinutes={props.timeZoneOffsetInMinutes}
onChange={this._onChange}
/>
</View>
);
}
});
var styles = StyleSheet.create({
rkDatePickerIOS: {
height: RCTDatePickerIOSConsts.ComponentHeight,
width: RCTDatePickerIOSConsts.ComponentWidth,
},
});
var rkDatePickerIOSAttributes = merge(ReactIOSViewAttributes.UIView, {
date: true,
maximumDate: true,
minimumDate: true,
mode: true,
minuteInterval: true,
timeZoneOffsetInMinutes: true,
});
var RCTDatePickerIOS = createReactIOSNativeComponentClass({
validAttributes: rkDatePickerIOSAttributes,
uiViewClassName: 'RCTDatePicker',
});
module.exports = DatePickerIOS;