Calendar Questions - Icalendar library, making a actual calendar
I have some questions regarding calendars
Is there any good calendar generates for either asp.net mvc or jquery. I would like to find something that can make calendars and have features like this.
- Generates all the months (but of course only features the current month that is being displayed)
- If the name of the calendar event is too long it cuts it off and if you click on it a popup comes showing you the full description
- Ability to add a new task to the calendar. So when you click on it pops up a dial开发者_StackOverflow社区og box and you can fill out information.
So basically what Google calendar can do. You can add a task then it pops up with like where, time notifications area.
So is there any sort of solution like this for .net MVC or jquery? If not then I am willing to use other javascript frameworks if needed but rather not.
I checked out http://arshaw.com/fullcalendar/ and it really does not have everything I need.
I like this one http://www.redredred.com.au/projects/jquery-week-calendar/
Since it almost does what I want but the major draw back this is that it only does weeks not a full month.
Is there some sort of library that I can use to easily import google calendar data in, outlook calendar data in and basically any major calendar program.
I know that icalendar is like the standard format so is there a C# library that will like parse this stuff?
I going to need to store the calendar data in a database. How would the database table look like?
I think that for the client side, you are asking for a little too much, to be honest. Your best bet is find the one that does the most that you want out-of-the-box but has enough customization to allow for you to fill in the functionality you are looking for. Either that, or write the code from scratch. To be honest, you are rendering a table with some jQuery on the front end for client-side events. It's tedious, but shouldn't be overly difficult.
As for a .NET library to handle calendar formats, I recommend DDay's iCal. It has some issues and requires some understanding to get running, but it works (I use it myself for a site that I project iCalendar entries from).
As for the calendar in the database, that's really up to you. The minimal amount of information you need is a date field, obviously. I'd recommend something with an offset (SQL Server 2008 has the datetimeoffset) since you might want to take into account time zones. Beyond that, any information you want to store is up to you.
In response to chobo2's comment about how to get the data to appear in the appropriate column, when you render the table, you are going to have a 7 x 5 table (seven days, five rows). I would suggest tagging each of them with the date.
Then, as you render your table, when you render the cell, you look to see if you have any events for your date, if you do, then render the cell appropriately.
Why don't you start slightly less ambitiously? Google has a large team working on their calendar and for you to hope to replicate that without taking years will just end up with an unfinished project.
1
You said you didn't like FullCalendar but it does support 95% of the features you need from the calendar, minus actually clicking on days to add events.
FullCalendar is great for displaying events, but it isn't a complete solution for event content-management. Beyond dragging an event to a different time/day, you cannot change an event's name or other associated data. It is up to you to add this functionality through FullCalendar's event hooks
You get a dayClick
event which you could use to add an event. I wouldn't bother though going this route though, and simply have a separate panel on the page with a text box for the name, a small icon which makes a Jquery UI calendar appear. It sounds low-tech but the pain of getting the click event working in all browsers would be a big task.
This textbox displays the full event name when you click on day which gets around your long text cropping issue. Alternatively this shows you a nice static html iCal-like solution which you may have looked at already.
Generating a month calendar for the year could be done statically using HTML instead of using jQuery.
2
If you stick to the iCalendar format for Outlook and Google, which both support it, then it's very easy to write a parser for that format as it's such a simple text format. This question has more details on making one, you could use an existing library for it.
3
A simple table of equivalent SQL types like below will be enough:
Events Id Name Location DateTime Start DateTime End bool IsRecurring
Recurring events will be the hardest part because of the calculations you have to perform to work out the next event. You don't store each occurrence in the database. Using the epoch for the calculations might help out, it's a technique Exchange uses.
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