SeedCodeCalendar12

Spanning Midnight

SeedCodeCalendar12.SpanningMidnight History

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February 25, 2013, at 03:38 AM by 98.245.113.231 -
Changed lines 3-4 from:
Yes. It also supports multi-day events that have no times associated with them. For the purposes of this documentation an event "spanning midnight" would be an event with a start date, no end date, and an end time earlier than it's start time.
to:
Yes. It also supports multi-day events that have no times associated with them. For the purposes of this documentation an event "spanning midnight" would be an event with a start date, no end date, and an end time earlier than its start time.
December 29, 2009, at 07:11 AM by 76.22.123.157 -
Changed lines 7-9 from:
Also note that when looking early in the morning of a day (so the earliest times read midnight, 1am, 2am, etc.) you won't see any events that began the day before. You'd need to look at the evening of the day before to see them.
to:
Also note that when looking early in the morning of a day (so the earliest times read midnight, 1am, 2am, etc.) you won't see any events that began the day before. You'd need to look at the evening of the day before to see them.

%center% http://www.seedcode.com/rootimages/stikipad/nextcal/midnight1.png
December 20, 2009, at 05:06 AM by 76.22.123.157 -
Changed lines 5-9 from:
However, the calendar displays events spanning midnight within a couple restrictions:

-> When looking at a day or week view if your scroll
the times until you can see into the morning of the next day you'll see any events that start in the current day and span midnight into the next morning. But you won't see any events that start after midnight (that start the next morning): you'd need to look at the next day to see those.

-> When
looking early in the morning of a day (so the earliest times read midnight, 1am, 2am, etc.) you won't see any events that began the day before. You'd need to look at the evening of the day before to see them.
to:
When looking at a day or week view if your scroll the times until you can see into the morning of the next day you'll see any events that start in the current day and span midnight into the next morning. And you'll see any events that start the next morning. But note that you won't be able to scroll very far into the next morning: the calendar will stop as soon as all the visible times would be in the next day.

Also note that when
looking early in the morning of a day (so the earliest times read midnight, 1am, 2am, etc.) you won't see any events that began the day before. You'd need to look at the evening of the day before to see them.
November 26, 2009, at 12:55 AM by 76.22.123.157 -
November 26, 2009, at 12:44 AM by 76.22.123.157 -
Added lines 1-9:
!! Does the calendar support events that span midnight?

Yes. It also supports multi-day events that have no times associated with them. For the purposes of this documentation an event "spanning midnight" would be an event with a start date, no end date, and an end time earlier than it's start time.

However, the calendar displays events spanning midnight within a couple restrictions:

-> When looking at a day or week view if your scroll the times until you can see into the morning of the next day you'll see any events that start in the current day and span midnight into the next morning. But you won't see any events that start after midnight (that start the next morning): you'd need to look at the next day to see those.

-> When looking early in the morning of a day (so the earliest times read midnight, 1am, 2am, etc.) you won't see any events that began the day before. You'd need to look at the evening of the day before to see them.
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