vue2-timepicker-version-2.0
v2.0.4
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A dropdown time picker (hour|minute|second) for Vue 2.x, with flexible time format support
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Vue2 Timepicker
💡 Dead repo recharged 🔋
A dropdown time picker (hour|minute|second) for Vue 2.x, with flexible time format support.
Demo
You can see the Vue2 Timepicker in action in the Demo Page
Migration
Please check MIGRATION.md for basic guidelines if you are about to:
- Migrate from the Vue 1.x version vue-time-picker
- Migrate from Bower to Yarn or NPM (Vue2 Timepicker
v0.1.x
->v0.2.0+
)
Dependencies
Installation
yarn add vue2-timepicker
npm install vue2-timepicker --save
NOTE: We stop Bower support from
0.2.0+
, please check MIGRATION.md for migration guidelines.
Get Started
Step 1: Import VueTimepicker
Option A: Import component JS and CSS
// Main JS (in UMD format)
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker'
// CSS
import 'vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.css'
Option B: Choose any bundle version base on your needs
Javascript
// CommonJS
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.common.js'
// UMD
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.umd.js'
// UMD Minified
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.umd.min.js'
CSS
@import 'vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.css';
/* Or, with node_module alias path like: */
@import '~vue2-timepicker/dist/VueTimepicker.css';
/*
NOTE: the path alias to `node_modules` differs between bundlers.
Please change the `~` to any alias that works with your environment.
*/
Single File Component
// The *.vue file with CSS included
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/src/vue-timepicker.vue'
// NOTE: In some cases, it requires additional workarounds in the bundler's config
SSR Usage
// Import the *.vue file (CSS included)
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/sfc'
// Note the `/sfc` suffix here
If your server-side renderer cannot recognize the /sfc
alias, please try --
// Manually point to the `/src` folder
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/src'
// Or, to the specific file name
import VueTimepicker from 'vue2-timepicker/src/vue-timepicker.vue'
Step 2: Include VueTimepicker in your component
var yourComponent = new Vue({
components: { VueTimepicker },
...
})
Step 3: Put vue-timepicker
in your component's template
Then, you can introduce the vue-timepicker
tag anywhere you like in your component's template
<vue-timepicker></vue-timepicker>
Basic Usage
Base
<!-- 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 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, the
format
string is 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>
Data Binding
Bind Value with v-model
From v1.0.0+
, timepicker's v-model
accepts value in both Object (default) and String format. The v0.x
versions only support Object form.
Set Initial Value
For example, if you want to set "10:05:00" ("HH:mm:ss" format) as the initial value of vue-timepicker:
const yourComponent = new Vue({
components: { VueTimepicker },
data () {
return {
// Object form
yourTimeValue: {
HH: '10',
mm: '05',
ss: '00'
},
// String form
yourStringTimeValue: '10:05:00',
...
}
},
...
})
Both forms lead to the same result.
<!-- Object form -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- String form -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourStringTimeValue" format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>
Set Empty Initial Value
When the initial value is completely unknown:
data () {
return {
// Will be rendered as Object form
yourEmptyValue: {},
emptyValueToo: undefined,
emptyValueAsWell: null,
// Will be taken into String form
yourEmptyStringValue: ''
}
}
Set Partially-Known Initial Value
For instance, if you want to set the initial hour value to 8 pm and leave the rest slots empty:
data () {
return {
// OBJECT FORM
// Default 24-Hour
timeValue: {
HH: '20',
mm: ''
},
// 12-Hour with seconds
timeValueWithSec: {
h: '8',
mm: '',
ss: '',
A: 'PM'
},
// STRING FORM
// Default 24-Hour + String value
stringTimeValue: '20:mm',
// 12-Hour with seconds + String value
stringTimeValueWithSec: '8:mm:ss PM'
}
}
<!-- OBJECT FORM -->
<!-- Default 24-Hour -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="timeValue"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- 12-Hour with seconds -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="timeValueWithSec" format="h:mm:ss A"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- STRING FORM -->
<!-- Default 24-Hour + String value -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="stringTimeValue"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- 12-Hour with seconds + String value -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="stringTimeValueWithSec" format="h:mm:ss A"></vue-timepicker>
Get Time Picker's Current Value
Get value from v-model
You can either read the binding v-model
value anytime or add a handler to deal with the input
event from vue-timepicker.
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" format="HH:mm:ss" @input="inputHandler"></vue-timepicker>
{
data () {
return {
yourTimeValue: {
HH: '10',
mm: '05',
ss: '00'
},
...
}
},
methods: {
inputHandler (eventData) {
console.log(eventData)
}
}
}
In this case, we set the initial value (yourTimeValue) to "10:05:00". Then, open the dropdown picker and pick a new time, like setting it to "14:30:15" for example.
// In `inputHandler`:
// console.log outputs -> {HH: "14", mm: "30", ss: "15"}
Read Data From change
Event
<!-- A: No argument -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" @change="changeHandler"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- B: Custom arguments -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourTimeValue" @change="otherChangeHandler($event, 'foo', 42)"></vue-timepicker>
// A: No argument
changeHandler (eventData) {
console.log(eventData)
// -> {data: {HH:..., mm:... }, displayTime: "HH:mm"}
}
// B: Custom arguments
otherChangeHandler (eventData, yourArg1, yourArg2) {
console.log(eventData)
// -> {data: {HH:..., mm:... }, displayTime: "HH:mm"}
console.log(yourArg1)
// -> 'foo'
console.log(yourArg2)
// -> 42
}
Unlike v-model
and input
event, which only return the defined time tokens you provided in the binding variable, the change
event delivers all supported formats.
In the example above, after the user set values to "14:30:15" in the picker, change
event returns the following data:
// `@change` event data
{
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"
},
// extra `displayTime` added since v0.2.2
displayTime: "14:30:15"
}
Whereas the v-model
/ input
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"
}
Advance Usage
Hide Clear Button
<vue-timepicker hide-clear-button></vue-timepicker>
Enable to hide the "×" clear button on the right-hand side. Users can still pick new values from the dropdown, but they cannot erase any selected data.
Disable Picker
<vue-timepicker disabled></vue-timepicker>
Fully disable both dropdown picker and the "×" clear button in the UI, to prevent users from changing any values again.
Close on Complete
Automatically close the dropdown when the user finishes selecting all of the required fields.
<vue-timepicker close-on-complete></vue-timepicker>
Auto-Scroll
<vue-timepicker auto-scroll></vue-timepicker>
Auto-scroll to selected values on dropdown open. It works with both:
- Programmatically defined value. E.g., the initial value from
v-model
- Values manually picked by the user.
Define Hour Range
Sometimes you may want to limit hours picker to a specific range. The hour-range
parameter is here to help.
<!-- 24-Hour Format -->
<vue-timepicker :hour-range="[5, [8, 12], [14, 17], 19]"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- >> Equals to :hour-range="[5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19]" -->
<!-- 12-Hour Format -->
<vue-timepicker :hour-range="['7a', '9a', '11a', '1p', ['3p', '5p'], '7p']" format="hh:mm a">
<!-- >> Equals to :hour-range="['7a', '9a', '11a', '1p', '3p', '4p', '5p', '7p']" -->
Set Minute and Second Range
Similar to hour-range
, you can determine values in the minutes and seconds dropdown by using minute-range
and second-range
.
<!-- Minute range -->
<vue-timepicker :minute-range="[0, 6, [10, 30], 42, 50]"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- >> Active Items: 00, 06, 10, 11, 12, 13, ..., 27, 28, 29, 30, 42, 50 -->
<!-- Second range -->
<vue-timepicker format="H:m:s" :second-range="[0, 6, [10, 30], 42, 50]"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- >> Active Items: 0, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13, ..., 27, 28, 29, 30, 42, 50 -->
When implemented together with minute-interval
and second-interval
, the customized intervals take the priority.
<!-- Minute range + 5-minute interval -->
<vue-timepicker :minute-range="[0, 6, [10, 30], 42, 50]" :minute-interval="5"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- >> Active Items: 00, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 50 -->
<!-- Second range + 10-second interval-->
<vue-timepicker format="H:m:s" :second-range="[0, 6, [10, 30], 42, 50]" :second-interval="10"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- >> Active Items: 0, 10, 20, 30, 50 -->
Hide Disabled Items
There're four kinds of helper properties to let you hide the values excluded by hour-range
, minute-range
, and second-range
.
- hide-disabled-items: Hide all disabled items - hour, minute, and seconds.
- hide-disabled-hours: Hide disabled hour values only.
- hide-disabled-minutes: Hide disabled minute values only.
- hide-disabled-seconds: Hide disabled second values only.
<!-- `hide-disabled-hours` sample -->
<vue-timepicker :hour-range="[5, [8, 12], [14, 17], 19]" hide-disabled-hours></vue-timepicker>
Here we take the hide-disabled-hours
as an example. It's a pair with the hour-range
parameter. In this case, the hour picker hides the invalid hours (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 13, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23) and display the valid hours (5, 8, 9, ...) only.
Advanced Keyboard Support
Basic keyboard support includes:
- Tab: Focus or blur the Timepicker
- Esc: Close the dropdown
Advance Keyboard support (enabled with advanced-keyboard
):
- Arrow Keys: Navigate between valid (non-disabled) values and columns
- Space or Enter: Select the focusing item
<vue-timepicker advanced-keyboard></vue-timepicker>
Please be aware that after putting the advanced-keyboard
on, hundreds of additional keyboard event listeners are going to be attached to the component. The amount of listeners depends on how many hours, minutes, and seconds value you enabled in the current Timepicker.
Blur Delay
<!-- Unit: million second -->
<vue-timepicker :blur-delay="500"></vue-timepicker>
Sets the blur delay time for the dropdown. Defaults to 300
if not set.
Manual Input Support
<vue-timepicker manual-input></vue-timepicker>
Let users add or change values through the <input>
box besides the dropdown picker.
Manual Input Timeout
<!-- Unit: million second -->
<vue-timepicker :manual-input-timeout="1500"></vue-timepicker>
Works with manual-input mode. It sets the timeout for continuous input. Defaults to 1000
if not set.
How It Works?
For example, when a user focuses on the hour slot (HH
) of a "HH:mm"
formatted Timepicker (with the default value 1000
):
- Case 1: User first inputs
1
, and then inputs2
500ms later -> Timepicker takes12
as the final value and set it to the"HH"
slot. - Case 2: User inputs
1
, and then presses the key2
1200ms later -> Timepicker takes2
as the final value and set it to02
for the"HH"
slot.
Hide Dropdown
NOTE: To use this feature, you MUST ENABLE the
manual-input
mode (v.1.1.0+) in the first place.
It makes the dropdown picker hidden by default.
<vue-timepicker manual-input hide-dropdown></vue-timepicker>
Users can still choose to open the dropdown by clicking the triangle ("▾") button on the right. (v.1.1.3+)
Fixed Dropdown Button
<vue-timepicker fixed-dropdown-button></vue-timepicker>
Make the dropdown button always visible in the UI. (v.1.1.4+)
Drop Direction
Change dropdown direction when needed (v.1.1.5+). Accepting values:
- down: Default value.
- up: Force open the dropdown above the input.
- auto: Auto detects available height and opens the dropdown on top if there are not enough spaces below the input.
<!-- Force drop up -->
<vue-timepicker drop-direction="up"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- Auto drop direction -->
<vue-timepicker drop-direction="auto"></vue-timepicker>
Container ID
Works with drop-direction="auto"
. It defines the parent container where the timepicker should calculate the free spaces from. If this value is not set, timepicker will watch document.body
instead.
<!-- Parent Container ID: "auto-dropdown-containter" -->
<div id="auto-dropdown-containter">
<!-- Defined Container -->
<vue-timepicker drop-direction="auto" container-id="auto-dropdown-containter"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- Default (document body) -->
<vue-timepicker drop-direction="auto"></vue-timepicker>
</div>
Drop Offset Height
Works with drop-direction="auto"
either. Defaults to 160
(unit: px) if the value is not set.
<!--
When the available bottom space is less than 200px,
open the dropdown above the input.
-->
<vue-timepicker drop-direction="auto" :drop-offset-height="200"></vue-timepicker>
Lazy Event Mode
<vue-timepicker lazy></vue-timepicker>
When lazy
event mode is toggled on, only an actual user behavior can trigger the input
and change
events. Which are:
- The user opened the dropdown and picked a new value
- The user clicked the ("×") clear button
- The user inputted a new value or clear the existing value in the Manual Input mode
In other words, on lazy
mode, Timepicker won't emit input
and change
events on mounted, nor after the value got modified programmatically.
Append To Body
Append the dropdown menu to the end of the document <body>
. Try this if you have z-index
or overflow
layout issue with the dropdown.
<vue-timepicker append-to-body></vue-timepicker>
The body-appended dropdown's CSS class is vue__time-picker-dropdown
. Its default z-index
is 100
. You can change the value by adding the following style in your app --
/* E.g. set the z-index to 5000 */
.vue__time-picker-dropdown {
z-index: 5000;
}
NOTE: If you have to override some of the CSS styles within the dropdown, you will need to update their selectors' class names as well. Simply change any .vue__time-picker .dropdown
selector to .vue__time-picker-dropdown
.
For example, when you have a customized background color set for selected values:
/* Default override (not using "append-to-body") */
.vue__time-picker .dropdown ul li:not([disabled]).active {
background: steelblue;
}
/* When using "append-to-body" */
.vue__time-picker-dropdown ul li:not([disabled]).active {
background: steelblue;
}
Enable Debug Mode
<vue-timepicker debug-mode></vue-timepicker>
It's aimed to help developers to investigate the input -> output process. When debug mode is toggled on, you can see extra DEBUG: ...
logs coming through the console window as you interact with the vue-timepicker.
Let's create a "bug" here as an example --
<!-- Manual Bug Sample: Define timepicker with format "h:mm:ss A" -->
<vue-timepicker v-model="yourStringValue" format="h:mm:ss A" debug-mode></vue-timepicker>
{
data () {
return {
// Manual Bug Sample:
// Should be '3:mm:05 A' but oops.. the finger slipped
yourStringValue: 'e:mm:05 A'
}
}
}
Then, in the console window, you should see a debug log saying:
DEBUG: The input string in "v-model" does NOT match the "format" pattern
format: h:mm:ss A
v-model: e:mm:05 A
Main Props API Overview
Prop | Type | Required | Default Value ------------------------- | ------------------ | -------- | ------------- v-model | Object, String | 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 | false close-on-complete | Boolean | no | false auto-scroll | Boolean | no | false hour-range | Array | no | undefined minute-range | Array | no | undefined second-range | Array | no | undefined hide-disabled-hours | Boolean | no | false hide-disabled-minutes | Boolean | no | false hide-disabled-seconds | Boolean | no | false hide-disabled-items | Boolean | no | false advanced-keyboard | Boolean | no | false blur-delay | Number | no | 300 manual-input | Boolean | no | false manual-input-timeout | Number | no | 1000 hide-dropdown | Boolean | no | false fixed-dropdown-button | Boolean | no | false drop-direction | String | no | "down" container-id | String | no | undefined drop-offset-height | Number | no | 160 lazy | Boolean | no | false append-to-body | Boolean | no | false debug-mode | Boolean | no | false
Input Props API
Prop | Type | Required | Default Value ------------------| --------------------------- | -------- | ------------- id | String | no | undefined name | String | no | undefined placeholder | String | no | undefined tabindex | Number | no | 0 autocomplete | String | no | 'off' input-class | String, Array, Object | no | undefined input-width | String | no | '10em'
Timepicker supports id
, name
, placeholder
, and tabindex
like common form elements. These values are assigned to the <input type="text" class="display-time">
within the component.
Input id
, name
and tabindex
<!-- id -->
<vue-timepicker id="myFirstPicker"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- name -->
<vue-timepicker name="nameInForm"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- tabindex -->
<vue-timepicker :tabindex="5"></vue-timepicker>
Input placeholder
When placeholder
is undefined, timepicker takes the determined format string instead.
<!-- placeholder is set -->
<vue-timepicker placeholder="Start Time"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- -> "Start Time" -->
<!-- placeholder not set -->
<vue-timepicker format="hh:mm A"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- -> "hh:mm A" -->
<!-- both placeholder and format are not set -->
<vue-timepicker></vue-timepicker>
<!-- -> "HH:mm" -->
Input autocomplete
Attribute
NOTE: To use this property, you MUST ENABLE the
manual-input
mode (v.1.1.0+) in the first place.
<!-- In Vue Template -->
<vue-timepicker name="starttime" autocomplete="on" manual-input></vue-timepicker>
<!-- HTML result -->
<span class="vue__time-picker time-picker">
<input class="display-time" name="starttime" type="text" autocomplete="on">
<!-- ... -->
</span>
When enabled, it accepts any string value supported by the HTML input autocomplete
attribute. The value is assigned to the embedding text <input>
, which means it follows form autofill rules and configs set in the browser level. For example, most of the browsers require the input to have a name
and/or id
attribute. Some browsers, like Firefox, demand the input to be a descendant of a <form>
element.
Please refer to the HTML documentation and the developer guideline of each browser for more information (i.e., MDN docs here).
The input-class
The input-class
is assigned to the text input within the component as well.
<!-- Set your own `input-class` in the Vue template -->
<vue-timepicker input-class="my-awesome-picker"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- HTML result -->
<span class="vue__time-picker time-picker">
<input class="display-time my-awesome-picker" type="text" readonly="readonly">
<!-- ... -->
</span>
Start from v1.0.4
, besides String format, input-class
accepts value in Array and Object type as well.
<!-- String type -->
<vue-timepicker input-class="your-awesome-timepicker i-am-vue2-timepicker"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- Array type -->
<vue-timepicker :input-class="['your-awesome-timepicker', 'i-am-vue2-timepicker']"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- Object type -->
<vue-timepicker :input-class="{
'your-awesome-timepicker': true,
'foo': false,
'i-am-vue2-timepicker': true,
'bar': false
}"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- All of the three samples above return the same result in rendered HTML -->
<span class="vue__time-picker time-picker">
<input class="display-time your-awesome-timepicker i-am-vue2-timepicker" type="text" readonly="readonly">
<!-- ... -->
</span>
The input-width
The input-width
helps you to adjust both the <input>
and the dropdown picker's width without overriding the CSS style on your own. It accepts any valid CSS width values like 8em
, 200px
, etc.
<!-- In `px` -->
<vue-timepicker input-width="100px"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- In `em` -->
<vue-timepicker input-width="12em" format="HH:mm:ss"></vue-timepicker>
Events API
Event | Arguments | Description
-------------- | -------------- | ----------------------
input | (value) | Emit after value changes
change | (eventData) | Emit after value changes
open | | Emit when the dropdown opens
close | (eventData) | Emit when the dropdown closes
focus | | Emit when the user start focusing on the <input>
blur | (eventData) | Emit when the user blurs the <input>
error | (eventData) | Emit when the input value becomes invalid
The open
and close
Event of the Dropdown Picker
Help to identify the current status of the dropdown picker
data () {
return {
dropdownStatus: 'closed'
}
}
<p>Dropdown Status: I'm {{dropdownStatus}}!</p>
<vue-timepicker @open="dropdownStatus = 'opened'" @close="dropdownStatus = 'closed'"></vue-timepicker>
The focus
and blur
Event
It works with the Manual Input mode, aimed to identify the focus/blur state of the <input>
box. Specially useful in cases where the dropdown is force hidden by hide-dropdown
.
data () {
return {
focusState: 'blurred'
}
}
<p>Focus State: {{focusState}}</p>
<vue-timepicker manual-input hide-dropdown @focus="focusState = 'focused'" @blur="focusState = 'blurred'"></vue-timepicker>
The error
event
Starts from v.1.1.0+
, Timepicker will emit an error
event when the current input value becomes invalid. E.g., when it contains an hour value that is not in the hour-range
list or a minute value that doesn't fit in the minute-interval
.
<!-- Got the `hour-range` and `minute-interval` set -->
<!-- And add a hanlder to pick up the "error" event -->
<vue-timepicker format="H:mm:ss" v-model="erroredInputSample" :hour-range="[8, 9, 10, 11]" :minute-interval="5" @error="errorHanlder"></vue-timepicker>
data () {
return {
erroredInputSample: { H: '5', mm: '03', ss: '00' }
// NOTE:
// H: '5' -> invalid. Value is not in the `hour-range` list
// mm: '03' -> invalid. Value does not fit in the `minute-interval`
// ss: '00' -> valid.
}
},
methods: {
errorHanlder (eventData) {
console.log(eventData)
// console.log outputs -> ["hour", "minute"]
}
}
The error
event returns an Array of invalid fields' names. When it returns an empty array []
, it means the current input is valid, and all previous errors are gone
NOTE: Empty value will not be marked as invalid.
Helper CSS Class Names
Started from v.1.1.0+
, Vue Timepicker will add additional CSS classes to the <input>
element base on the state of the current input value.
- invalid: One or more fields containing an invalid or disabled value.
- Additional CSS Style: The
<input>
border turns red. - If you want to mute this red border style, add
"skip-error-style"
toinput-class
- Additional CSS Style: The
- is-empty: The input value (v-model) is empty. No additional style.
- all-selected: All fields (hour/minute/second/apm) required by the
format
string are not empty. No additional style.
<!-- To mute the red border style of "invalid" state -->
<timepicker input-class="skip-error-style"></timepicker>
<timepicker :input-class="['skip-error-style', 'your-other-class-names']"></timepicker>
Miscellaneous Props API
Prop | Type | Required | Default Value ----------------------- | --------- | -------- | ------------- hour-label | String | no | undefined minute-label | String | no | undefined second-label | String | no | undefined apm-label | String | no | undefined am-text | String | no | undefined pm-text | String | no | undefined
Customized Picker Labels
You can define customized labels on top of the hour, minute, second, and APM pickers with the following properties: hour-label
, minute-label
, second-label
, and apm-label
.
Furthermore, you can replace those am/pm (or AM/PM) string by setting the am-text
and pm-text
parameters.
Please note that these two parameters only change the labels expose to the users (the UI level). The
v-model
value anddisplayTime
value returned by thechange
event (the data level) still use the standard am/pm (AM/PM) format.
<!-- 24-hour format with customized hour and minute label -->
<vue-timepicker hour-label="heure" minute-label="minute"></vue-timepicker>
<!-- 12-hour format with customized am/pm text -->
<vue-timepicker hour-label="時" minute-label="分" second-label="秒" apm-label="午" am-text="上午" pm-text="下午" format="h:mm:ss a"></vue-timepicker>
Slots
We introduce three slots in v.1.1.4
to help you customize the clear button, the dropdown button, and the input icon with your own icon/image.
Slot Name | Position | Description
------------------ | -------- | --------------
icon | left | On the lefthand side of the <input>
clearButton | right | In the same spot of the default clear button
dropdownButton | right | In the same spot of the default dropdown button
Please note that Vue v2.6.0+ introduces a significant update of the Named Slots syntax. Check the official documentation for more information.
<!-- For Vue 2.6.0+ -->
<!-- Input icon (image) -->
<vue-timepicker>
<template v-slot:icon>
<img src="$YOUR_ICON_SRC" />
</template>
</vue-timepicker>
<!-- Customized clear button (image) -->
<vue-timepicker>
<template v-slot:clearButton>
<img src="$YOUR_CUSTOM_IMAGE_SRC" />
</template>
</vue-timepicker>
<!-- Customized dropdown button (character entity) -->
<vue-timepicker manual-input hide-dropdown>
<template v-slot:dropdownButton>≣</template>
</vue-timepicker>
Contribution
Please feel free to fork and help developing. Check CONTRIBUTING.md for more details.
Change Log
Detail changes of each release: CHANGELOG.md