A life by weeks timeline component for React. Inspired by this post on Wait but Why, and busterbenson.com.
Live demo: onejgordon.github.io/react-life-timeline
To build the examples locally, run:
npm install
npm start
Then open localhost:8000
in a browser.
The easiest way to use react-life-timeline is to install it from NPM and include it in your own React build process (using Browserify, Webpack, etc).
You can also use the standalone build by including dist/react-life-timeline.js
in your page. If you use this, make sure you have already included React, and it is available as a global variable.
npm install react-life-timeline --save
Drop the component in with a get_events method that calls a callback with an array of events from a local or API data source.
Each event object should have:
- title: Title of event
- date_start: Date object
- date_end: Date object (optional)
- color: Hex color (optional)
- ongoing: Boolean (If true, event will be rendered through today, default: false)
var ReactLifeTimeline = require('react-life-timeline');
<ReactLifeTimeline get_events={this.fetch_events.bind(this)} birthday={new Date('1985-04-04')}></ReactLifeTimeline>
And an example get_events function:
fetch_events: function(cb) {
api.get('/api/your-resource', {id: 1}, (res) => {
cb(res.events);
});
}
Either specify a get_events function, or pass in events as props.
- get_events:
void function(callback)
- events: Optional list of event objects
- birthday (date object)
- birthday_color (hex string)
- subject_name (string, or null for 'I')
- project_days (int, # of days to project into future)
NOTE: The source code for the component is in src
. A transpiled CommonJS version (generated with Babel) is available in lib
for use with node.js, browserify and webpack. A UMD bundle is also built to dist
, which can be included without the need for any build system.
To build, watch and serve the examples (which will also watch the component source), run npm start
. If you just want to watch changes to src
and rebuild lib
, run npm run watch
(this is useful if you are working with npm link
).
Thanks to JedWatson's incredibly easy to use: https://github.com/JedWatson/generator-react-component
Copyright (c) 2017 Jeremy Gordon.