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A Jetpack Compose library for handling calendar component rendering.

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Compose Calendar is a composable handling all complexity of rendering calendar component and date selection. Due to flexibility provided by slot API's, you can decide how the calendar will look like, the library will handle proper calendar elements arrangement and it's state.

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Setup

Library is available on Maven Central repository.

  // module-level build.gradle
  dependecies {
    implementation "io.github.boguszpawlowski.composecalendar:composecalendar:<latest-version>"
    
    // separate artifact with utilities for working with kotlinx-datetime
    implementation "io.github.boguszpawlowski.composecalendar:kotlinx-datetime:<latest-version>"
  }

Snapshots are available on Sonatype’s snapshots repository.

Compose versions

Compose Version Compose Calendar Version
1.0.0 0.3.0
1.1.0 0.5.1
1.2.0 0.6.0
1.2.1 1.0.2
1.3.1 1.1.0

Supported features

  • Selection (single, multiple or a range of days)
  • Every day as first day of week
  • Showing/hiding adjacent months
  • Month and week headers
  • Customizable month container
  • Fully customizable day content
  • Horizontal swipe for changing a current month
  • Month / Week mode

Basic Usage

Static calendar

To show the basic version of the calendar, without any kind of selection mechanism, you can simply use the StaticCalendar composable without passing any parameters:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    StaticCalendar()
  }

This chunk will render the calendar with default components for each day, and also month and week headers. See the StaticCalendarSample file for a full example. For showing a week calendar, you can similarly use StaticWeekCalendar:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    StaticWeekCalendar()
  }

❗ By default, at first the calendar will show current month. If you want to start with some different date, you have to pass an initialMonth parameter to the initial state of the calendar. See Initial State section

Selectable calendar

Calendar with a mechanism for selection. The default implementation uses DynamicSelectionState (see Dynamic Selection section) which allows to change SelectionMode in the runtime.

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    SelectableCalendar()
  }

By the default, after changing the selection mode, selection is cleared. See the SelectableCalendarSample file for a full example. For showing a week calendar, you can similarly use SelectableWeekCalendar:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    SelectableWeekCalendar()
  }

See the WeekCalendarSample file for a full example.

selection_demo.mp4

❗ If you want to define your own selection behavior, please check out the Custom Selection section and/or CustomSelectionSample.

Calendar with custom components

For the customization you should pass your own composable functions as day content, moth header etc.:

  @Composable
  fun MyDay(dayState: DayState) {
    Text(dayState.date.dayOfMonth.toString())
  }

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
     StaticCalendar(
        dayContent = { dayState -> MyDay(dayState) }
     )
  }

The same you can do for every customizable element:

  • Day content - responsible for single day content
  • Month header - responsible for showing the current month (and by default for changing the current month)
  • Week header - responsible for showing the names of week days.
  • Month container - wrapping the month content, it defaults to a plain Box, but can be any layout.

The Calendar composable accepts a Modifier for simple customization of the overall appearance. See the CustomComponentsSample for a full example.

Custom selection

As the selection state is represented by an interface, you can provide your own implementation, to suit your use-case. E.g:

  class MonthSelectionState(
    initialSelection: YearMonth? = null,
  ) : SelectionState {
    private var selection by mutableStateOf(initialSelection)
  
    override fun isDateSelected(date: LocalDate): Boolean =
      date.yearMonth == selection
  
    override fun onDateSelected(date: LocalDate) {
      selection = if (date.yearMonth == selection) null else date.yearMonth
    }
  }

To use the defined selection state, you have to pass it into a generic version of Calendar composable. This chunk is an implementation that will select all days in a clicked day's month. For a full example please check out CustomSelectionSample file.

Calendar properties customization

Apart from rendering your own components inside the calendar, you can modify it by passing different properties.:

  • showAdjacentMonths - whenever to render days from adjacent months. Defaults to true.
  • firstDayOfWeek - you can pass the DayOfWeek which you want you week to start with. It defaults to the first day of week of the Locale.default().
  • horizontalScrollEnabled - a Boolean flag which enables month to be changed by a horizontal swipe. Defaults to true.

Apart from this, Calendar you can pass a Modifier object like in any other composable.

State

Calendar composable holds its state as an CalendarState object, which consists of 2 properties.

  • MonthState - current value of the presented month.
  • SelectionState - current value of the selection.

Both properties are represented by interfaces, so the default implementation can be overwritten if needed. The calendar state is leveraging Compose saving mechanism, so that the state will survive any configuration change, or the process death.

Initial state

Initial state for the static calendar is provided by the rememberCalendarState() function. If you need to change the initial conditions, you can pass the params to it:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    StaticCalendar(
      calendarState = rememberCalendarState(
        initialMonth = YearMonth.now().plusYears(1),
      )
    )
  }

In case of the selectable calendar, the state has additional parameters, used to calculate the initial selection:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    SelectableCalendar(
      calendarState = rememberSelectableCalendarState(
        initialMonth = YearMonth.now().plusYears(1),
        initialSelection = listOf(LocalDate.parse("20-01-2020")),
        initialSelectionMode = SelectionMode.Period,
      )
    )
  }

State hoisting

In case you need to react to the state changes, or change the state from the outside of the composable, you need to hoist the state out of the Calendar composable:

  @Composable
  fun MainScreen() {
    val calendarState = rememberCalendarState()
    StaticCalendar(calendarState = calendarState)
   
    // now you can manipulate the state from scope of this composable
    calendarState.monthState.currentMonth = YearMonth.of(2020, 5)
  }

Dynamic Selection State

By default, the SelectableCalendar is using a DynamicSelectionState implementation of SelectionState. The selection is kept as a list of LocalDate objects. For a purpose of flexibility, DynamicSelectionState allows for 4 different selection modes, each one varying how the selection is changing after interacting with the calendar. Furthermore, selection mode can be changed in the runtime, for some specific use-cases. Selection modes are represented by SelectionMode enum, with following values:

  • None - no selection allowed - selection will always be an empty list.
  • Single - only single day is selectable - selection will contain one or zero days selected.
  • Multiple - a list of dates can be selected.
  • Period - selectable period - implemented by start and end dates. - selection will contain all dates between start and the end date. This implementation of SelectionState also allows for handling side-effects and vetoing the state change via confirmSelectionChange callback.

KotlinX DateTime

As the core of the library is built on java.time library, on Android it requires to use core libary desugaring to be able to access it's API. As a result it's features may be unavailable to some project built around different date-time libraries (e.g. kotlinx-datetime). Although the project wont be migrating from java.time, as it's the best suited for it, there is a separate kotlinx-datetime artifact for those who need to use the library from a codebase based on it. It doesn't consist of a separate version of ComposeCalendar features, but offers a small bunch of utilities, that will enable you to create your own wrapper, as briefly presented in KotlinDateTimeSample. If the provided functionality, doesn't match your use-case, please submit an issue.

License

Copyright 2022 Bogusz Pawłowski

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

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A Jetpack Compose library for handling calendar component rendering.

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