![]() Under Time your calendar starts, choose the time that you wish to use as start time on your calendar from the dropdown. However, I am open to feature or pull requests. Click on the gear icon located at the upper right part of the screen. This repository captures the state of code which I use in production and currently does not include features which I do not need. For example, some View Object properties such as end do not contain the "correct" value. Care is taken to make this trick transparent to the user (you), but in some cases this is not 100% possible. For example: A Friday with two columns is rendered behind the scenes by asking FullCalendar to draw two days, Friday and the coming Monday, where Monday corresponds to Friday's second column. I want to use multiple calendars and lose the time axis in the agenda view. The implementation works by tricking FullCalendar into displaying columns as separate days. This has the advantage that you can use it with newer versions of FullCalendar, and do not have to depend on a probably unmaintained clone. Unlike other similar solutions, this is not a fork of FullCalendar. Hope that gives some clarity.// Only display one column, namely col. Given that, and given other things happening in my life, and estimating the effort to implement List view, that's likely a late October launch date. ![]() I'll likely do one more minor release for scheduler (to cater to paying customers) and then begin work on List view. These two features are low-hanging fruit that I'll likely tackle first: #424 #429Ĭombined they are about 1/3rd the demand of List View, but probably 1/20th the effort. I've run this idea past others and they seem receptive. The incentive to continue to support this new view amidst the hundreds of other feature requests is just not there for me otherwise. I'll likely make this a premium add-on in the same vein as scheduler. Very important deliver on it though, given the high demand. Hi to get List View up to the same standards as the other views (touch-friendly, printer-friendly, RTL, themeable, robust API), it's a non-trivial amount of work. Need to add some more text here, but they provide demos for Angular, React, and Vue too, those seem to work (haven't tried the Vue one). Look at this wherer the agenda has many (in my case potentially up to 120 entries)Īnd what i want to get is something like the sketch I can't get the 'markers' to show when I try the demo code for ApexCharts Column with Markers. I could use clientEvents to render my own list. essentially trying to build a flipped table internally using buildSkelton() I tried flipping this logic but it seems the rest of the code relies that the tableīe built like this. Have the days on the left and entries horizontally displayed.īut it seems that the way buildSkeloton() builds the html table in a static manner. If you look at the basicWeek view I want to rotate the table -90 degrees. edit web part and stick your curser in the white bar directly below the content editor title bar, at the top of your screen click on the arrow next to HTML and click Edit HTML source, paste Sunil's code in the box. ![]() ![]() you will now have a content editor web part on your page. I noticed everything is based on buildSkeleton() under categories select Media and Content - click add. Hi I have been trying to change the code my self in an attempt to create some sort of ![]()
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