gradio_calendar
Gradio component for selecting dates with a calendar 📆
Installation
pip install gradio_calendar
Usage
import gradio as gr
from gradio_calendar import Calendar
import datetime
def is_weekday(date: datetime.datetime):
return date.weekday() < 5
demo = gr.Interface(is_weekday,
[Calendar(type="datetime", label="Select a date", info="Click the calendar icon to bring up the calendar.")],
gr.Label(label="Is it a weekday?"),
examples=["2023-01-01", "2023-12-11"],
cache_examples=True,
title="Is it a weekday?")
if __name__ == "__main__":
demo.launch()
Calendar
Initialization
name | type | default | description |
---|---|---|---|
value |
|
None |
None |
type |
|
"datetime" |
None |
label |
|
None |
None |
info |
|
None |
None |
show_label |
|
None |
None |
container |
|
True |
None |
scale |
|
None |
None |
min_width |
|
None |
None |
interactive |
|
None |
None |
visible |
|
True |
None |
elem_id |
|
None |
None |
elem_classes |
|
None |
None |
render |
|
True |
None |
load_fn |
|
None |
None |
every |
|
None |
None |
Events
name | description |
---|---|
change |
|
input |
|
submit |
User function
The impact on the users predict function varies depending on whether the component is used as an input or output for an event (or both).
- When used as an Input, the component only impacts the input signature of the user function.
- When used as an output, the component only impacts the return signature of the user function.
The code snippet below is accurate in cases where the component is used as both an input and an output.
def predict(
value: str | datetime.datetime | None
) -> str | datetime.datetime | None:
return value