Rome is full of features, all customizable and easy to understand.
The library has no external dependencies, is framework-agnostic, and comes by default with a pretty bare-bones style, but this allows it to be easily styled at any later points with the interface you want it to have.
Developers can use the time and date pickers together in the same widget, or they can break them apart and use each separately.
They can also customize the date and time the picker acquires via the popup, work with minimum and maximum values, and even prevent various dates from being selected.
Rome also allows for a custom day to be used as the week's first day, will automatically close the popup when a day is selected, and even work as a required field, preventing the user from moving on before selecting a date and time.
Examples and in-depth usage instructions are included with the Rome standard package.
What is new in this release:
- Updated bullseye@1.4.1.
What is new in version 2.1.20:
- Updated bullseye@1.4.1.
What is new in version 2.1.0:
- Changed weekStart default value to moment().weekday(0).day()
What is new in version 1.0.1:
- Fixed a bug where calendars would be cached but never found again.
- rome.find returns null if no calendar is found.
What is new in version 0.8.1:
- Fixed a bug where positioning would fail if the container had position: relative.
What is new in version 0.8.0:
- Replaced contra with contra.emitter, shaving bytes.
Requirements:
- JavaScript enabled on client side
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