This is an implementation of a calendar component for iOS written in Swift 4.0. It features both vertical and horizontal layout (and scrolling) and the display of native calendar events.
- iOS 8.0+
- XCode 9.0+
- Swift 4.2
pod 'KDCalendar', '~> 1.6.5'
# An alternative Core subspec is available without EventKit integration
# This avoids needing to add NSCalendarsUsageDescription in your Info.plist
pod 'KDCalendar/Core', '~> 1.6.5'
Add this to your Cartfile, and then run carthage update
:
github "mmick66/CalendarView" "master"
The files needed to be included are in the CalendarView subfolder of this project.
The calendar is a UIView
and can be added either programmatically or via a XIB/Storyboard. If doing the latter, make sure that the Module is selected to be KDCalendar.
It needs a delegate and data source that comply with:
protocol CalendarViewDataSource {
func startDate() -> NSDate // UTC Date
func endDate() -> NSDate // UTC Date
}
protocol CalendarViewDelegate {
func calendar(_ calendar : CalendarView, canSelectDate date : Date) -> Bool /* optional */
func calendar(_ calendar : CalendarView, didScrollToMonth date : Date) -> Void
func calendar(_ calendar : CalendarView, didSelectDate date : Date, withEvents events: [CalendarEvent]) -> Void
func calendar(_ calendar : CalendarView, didDeselectDate date : Date) -> Void /* optional */
func calendar(_ calendar : CalendarView, didLongPressDate date : Date) -> Void /* optional */
}
The data source will provide the start date and the end date of the calendar. The methods have a default implementation that will return Date()
resulting in a single-page calendar displaying the current month.
The delegate responds to events such as scrolling and the selection of specific dates.
Note: The dates should be in UTC (same as GMT)
You would want to implement the delegate functions inside your view controller as they appear in the example project.
Say you want to be able to scroll 3 months into the past, then:
func startDate() -> Date {
var dateComponents = DateComponents()
dateComponents.month = -3
let today = Date()
let threeMonthsAgo = self.calendarView.calendar.date(byAdding: dateComponents, to: today)
return threeMonthsAgo
}
You probably still want the calendar to open in today's date, so in this case do:
override func viewDidAppear(_ animated: Bool) {
super.viewDidAppear(animated)
let today = Date()
self.calendarView.setDisplayDate(today, animated: false)
}
Say you want tomorrow to be selected for some reason:
// can be in the viewDidAppear
let today = Date()
if let tomorrow = self.calendarView.calendar.date(byAdding: tomorrowComponents, to: today) {
self.calendarView.selectDate(tomorrow)
}
The calendar supports the selection of multiple dates. You can select a date either by clicking on a cell or by selecting it programmatically as:
self.calendarView.selectDate(date)
Similarly you can deselect:
self.calendarView.deselectDate(date)
You can get all the dates that were selected, either manually or programatically using:
self.calendarView.selectedDates
The calendar supports two basic layouts. Set the direction
property to .horizontal
or .vertical
:
calendarView.direction = .horizontal
The look of this calendar component is based on a small set of static variables defined in the CalendarView+Style.swift
file and in the CalanderView.Style
structure. Set values for these variables anywhere in your code, before the CalendarView gets rendered on screen, for example on the viewDidLoad() of the controller that owns it. One of the styles seen above is defined like so:
override func viewDidLoad() {
super.viewDidLoad()
CalendarView.Style.cellShape = .bevel(8.0)
CalendarView.Style.cellColorDefault = UIColor.clear
CalendarView.Style.cellColorToday = UIColor(red:1.00, green:0.84, blue:0.64, alpha:1.00)
CalendarView.Style.cellSelectedBorderColor = UIColor(red:1.00, green:0.63, blue:0.24, alpha:1.00)
CalendarView.Style.cellEventColor = UIColor(red:1.00, green:0.63, blue:0.24, alpha:1.00)
CalendarView.Style.headerTextColor = UIColor.white
CalendarView.Style.cellTextColorDefault = UIColor.white
CalendarView.Style.cellTextColorToday = UIColor(red:0.31, green:0.44, blue:0.47, alpha:1.00)
// complete init
}
Some calendars will want to display weekends as special and mark them with a different text color. To do that, first set the marksWeekends variable on the calendarView itself and (optionally) define the color to use.
CalendarView.Style.cellTextColorWeekend = UIColor.red
calendarView.marksWeekends = true
The CellShape
will define whether the dates are displayed in a circle or square with bevel or not.
Depending on the culture weeks are considered to start either on a Monday or on a Sunday. To change the way the days are displayed use:
CalendarView.Style.firstWeekday = .sunday
The calendar defaults to Monday which is standard in Europe.
This component has the ability to sync events from the system's EKEventStore
which is common with the native calendar provided in iOS.
To load events from the system's calendar call the followint method:
self.calendarView.loadEvents()
Optionally, a complete handler can be added in case an error is returned
self.calendarView.loadEvents() { error in
if error != nil {
// handle error
}
}
The code will pop up an alert view to ask the user if he will allow this app to access the calendar. If access is granted we can pass the events to the CalendarView
, otherwise we get a nil and notify the app about the denial.
There is a function that allows you to add a new event in the calendar. It is currently restrictred to a single day (like the rest of the calendar)
func addEvent(_ title: String, date: Date, duration hours: NSInteger = 1) -> Bool
To detect when the user wants to add a new date, the delegate can implement the didLongPressDate
method will notify the controller for a long press and the addEvent
function is usually used in conjuction with this delegate method.
Currently, the example implementation of this repo will open an alert view that will prompt the user for a title to the event and set it for the duration of an hour. Custom controls could be added to further refine the selection.
As with the loading of the events we need to give persmissions to the app.
Calculating dates can be somewhat complicated because while time is an absolute value, dates are a construct of culture: timezones are geopolitical areas and daylight savings times change according to government decision. The best way out of this is to calculate everything in UTC (same as GTM for what we are concerned) and so the startDate
and endDate
returned from the delegate should all be in UTC (+0000) time.
If you want to contribute there are always some open issues marked as enhancements in the issues tab. Any help is welcome.