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Angular UI Bootstrap Datepicker Weirdness

· 3 min read
John Reilly
OSS Engineer - TypeScript, Azure, React, Node.js, .NET

The Angular UI Bootstrap Datepicker is fan-dabby-dozy. But it has a ... pecularity. You can use the picker like this:

<div ng-app="peskyDatepicker">
<div ng-controller="DatepickerDemoCtrl as vm">
<input
type="text"
class="form-control"
datepicker-popup="mediumDate"
is-open="vm.valuationDatePickerIsOpen"
ng-click="vm.valuationDatePickerOpen()"
ng-model="vm.valuationDate"
/>
</div>
</div>
angular
.module('peskyDatepicker', ['ui.bootstrap'])
.controller('DatepickerDemoCtrl', [
function () {
var vm = this;

vm.valuationDate = new Date();
vm.valuationDatePickerIsOpen = false;

vm.valuationDatePickerOpen = function () {
this.valuationDatePickerIsOpen = true;
};
},
]);

The above code produces a textbox which, when clicked upon, renders the datepicker popup (which vanishes upon date selection). This works because the ng-click directive calls the valuationDatePickerOpen function on the controller which sets the valuationDatePickerIsOpen property to be true and that property happens to be bound to the is-open attribute. Your knee bone connected to your thigh bone, Your thigh bone connected to your hip bone... This makes sense. This works. Great.

But I want something a little prettier - I want to use the lovely calendar glyph to trigger the datepicker popup like in the docs. That should be really easy right? I just tweak the HTML to add a calendar button and the associated ng-click="vm.valuationDatePickerOpen()":

<div ng-app="peskyDatepicker">
<div ng-controller="DatepickerDemoCtrl as vm">
<p class="input-group">
<input
type="text"
class="form-control"
datepicker-popup="mediumDate"
is-open="vm.valuationDatePickerIsOpen"
ng-click="vm.valuationDatePickerOpen()"
ng-model="vm.valuationDate"
/>
<span class="input-group-btn">
<button
type="button"
class="btn btn-default"
ng-click="vm.valuationDatePickerOpen()"
>
<i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>
</button>
</span>
</p>
</div>
</div>

Miraculously, this doesn't work. Which is strange - I mean it ought to... The same ng-click directive is sat on our new calendar button as is in place on the datepicker itself. So what's happening? Well let's do some investigation. If you take a look at the docs you'll see that their example with the calendar glyph is subtly different to our own. Namely, when the opener function is invoked, the official docs pass along $event. To what end? Well, the docs opener function does something that our own does not. This:

$scope.open = function ($event) {
$event.preventDefault();
$event.stopPropagation();

$scope.opened = true;
};

Ignore all the $scope malarkey - I want you to pay attention to what is happening with $event. preventDefault and stopPropogation are being called. This is probably relevant.

I decided to do a little experimentation. I created a Plunk which demonstrates the datepicker and uses $watch to track what happens to valuationDatePickerIsOpen. The Plunk featured 2 calendar glyphs - the left one doesn't pass along $event to valuationDatePickerOpen when it is clicked and the right one does. When $event is passed we call preventDefault and stopPropogation.

After a little experimentation of my own I discovered that calling $event.stopPropogation() is the magic bullet. Without that in place valuationDatePickerIsOpen gets set to true and then immediately back to false again. I do not know why. There may be an entirely sane reason for this - if so then please do post a comment and let me know. It wouldn't hurt for the Angular UI Bootstrap Datepicker docs to mention this. Perhaps it's time to submit a PR....