DatePicker
Date picker UI component
Description
A date picker UI component allows an app user to a select a date from an
interactive calendar. Use the DatePicker
object to modify the appearance and
behavior of a date picker after you create it.
Creation
Create a date picker in an app using the uidatepicker
function.
Properties
Date Picker
Value
— Selected date
NaT
(default) | datetime
object
Selected date, specified as a datetime
object within the range of the Limits
property. To make the selected date unspecified, set this property to NaT
.
If the specified datetime
object contains time information, only the date information is preserved in the Value
property.
Example: d = uidatepicker('Value',datetime('today'))
Data Types: datetime
Placeholder
— Placeholder text
''
(default) | character vector | string scalar
Placeholder text, specified as a character vector or string scalar. The
placeholder provides a short hint to describe the expected input. The text shows only
when the Value
property is NaT
.
Example: 'aaaa/mm/dd'
Limits
— Selection limits
1-by-2 datetime
array
Selection limits, specified as a 1-by-2 datetime
array. The second value in this array must be later than the
first value. The default value is [datetime(0000,1,1)
datetime(9999,12,31)]
. This default value starts at the earliest possible
date and ends at the latest possible date that DatePicker
supports.
In the running app, the date picker allows the user to select dates on the closed interval defined by this property. If there are disabled dates or disabled days within the interval, then those dates and days are excluded.
Example: d = uidatepicker('Limits',[datetime('today')
datetime(2050,1,1)])
Data Types: datetime
DisplayFormat
— Display format
character vector | string scalar
Display format for the date picker text field, specified as a character vector or string scalar. The default format depends on the locale of the system running the app.
The format you specify must use valid letter identifiers that correspond to the Unicode® Locale Data Markup Language (LDML) standard for dates and times. To separate fields, you can include nonletter characters such as a hyphen, space, colon, or any non-ASCII characters.
Example: d = uidatepicker('DisplayFormat','dd/MM/yy')
Examples of Common Formats
This table lists common display formats. The examples show formatted output for the date, Wednesday, April 9, 2014.
Value of Format | Example |
---|---|
'yyyy-MM-dd' | 2014-04-09 |
'dd/MM/yyyy' | 09/04/2014 |
'dd.MM.yyyy' | 09.04.2014 |
'yyyy年 MM月
dd日' | 2014年 04月 09日 |
'MMMM d, yyyy' | April 9, 2014 |
All Date and Time Formats
Use these letter identifiers to create a display format. The third column of this table shows output for the date, Wednesday, April 9, 2014.
Letter Identifier | Description | Display |
---|---|---|
G | Era | CE |
y | Year, with no leading zeros. | 2014 |
yy | Year, using last two digits. | 14 |
yyy , yyyy ... | Year, using at least as many digits as there are instances of
'y' | For the year 2014, 'yyy' displays
2014 , while 'yyyyy'
displays 02014 . |
u , uu , ... | ISO year, a single number designating the year. | 2014 |
Q | Quarter, using one digit | 2 |
QQ | Quarter, using two digits | 02 |
QQQ | Quarter, abbreviated | Q2 |
QQQQ | Quarter, full name | 2nd quarter |
M | Month, numerical, using one or two digits | 4 |
MM | Month, numerical, using two digits | 04 |
MMM | Month, abbreviated name | Apr |
MMMM | Month, full name | April |
MMMMM | Month, capitalized first letter | A |
W | Week of the month, using one digit | 2 |
d | Day of the month, using one or two digits | 9 |
dd | Day of the month, using two digits | 09 |
D | Day of the year, using one, two, or three digits | 99 |
DD | Day of the year, using two digits | 99 |
DDD | Day of the year using three digits | 099
|
e | Day of the week, numerical, using one or two digits | 4 , where Sunday is the first day of the
week |
ee | Day of the week, numerical, using two digits | 04 |
eee | Day, abbreviated name | Wed |
eeee | Day, full name | Wednesday |
eeeee | Day, capitalized first letter | W |
Note
The edit field in the running app accepts delimited numeric values, even when the
DisplayFormat
includes words. For instance, if the month format is specified as'MMMM'
, the app accepts a numeric month such as04
, but will display a month name such as'April'
.If the user specifies a day-of-year number in the running app, and the format contains identifiers for both the day of year (
D
) and Gregorian year (y
), thendatetime
might not read the day-of-year number correctly. Use ISO year (u
) in place ofy
.Use one or more
u
characters instead ofy
characters to represent the year when working with year numbers near zero.
DisabledDates
— Disabled dates
empty datetime
array (default) | m-by-1 datetime
array
Disabled dates, specified as an m-by-1 datetime
array. This property specifies dates that are not available for
selection in the running app.
Example: d = uidatepicker('DisabledDates',datetime(2018,1,1))
disables January 1, 2018.
The datetime
array cannot not contain any
NaT
values, and the dates must be sorted in ascending
order.
To reenable all previously disabled dates, call NaT(0)
to
create an empty datetime
array:
d.DisabledDates = NaT(0);
Data Types: datetime
DisabledDaysOfWeek
— Disabled days of week
[]
(default) | vector of integers in the range [1, 7] | cell array of character vectors | string vector
Disabled days of the week, specified as one of the following:
Empty array
[]
, which enables all days of the week.Vector of whole numbers in the range [1, 7]. The numbers correspond to the days of the week. For example,
[1 3]
disables Sundays and Tuesdays.1-D cell array of character vectors, where the array elements contain localized day names. Partial day names must be unambiguous. For example,
{'F','Sa'}
disables Fridays and Saturdays.String vector containing full or partial localized day names.
When you specify day names using a cell array or string vector, the code works only in the locale that you write the code. To make the code work in any locale, specify this property as a vector of numbers.
Data Types: double
| cell
| string
Font and Color
FontName
— Font name
system supported font name
Font name, specified as a system supported font name. The default font depends on the specific operating system and locale.
If the specified font is not available, then MATLAB® uses the best match among the fonts available on the system where the app is running.
Example: 'Arial'
FontSize
— Font size
positive number
Font size, specified as a positive number. The units of measurement are pixels. The default font size depends on the specific operating system and locale.
Example: 14
FontWeight
— Font weight
'normal'
(default) | 'bold'
Font weight, specified as one of these values:
'normal'
— Default weight as defined by the particular font'bold'
— Thicker character outlines than'normal'
Not all fonts have a bold font weight. For fonts that do not, specifying
'bold'
results in the normal font weight.
FontAngle
— Font angle
'normal'
(default) | 'italic'
Font angle, specified as 'normal'
or 'italic'
.
Not all fonts have an italic font angle. For fonts that do not, specifying
'italic'
results in the normal font angle.
FontColor
— Font color
[0 0 0]
(default) | RGB triplet | hexadecimal color code | 'r'
| 'g'
| 'b'
| ...
Font color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, or one of the options listed in the table.
RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes are useful for specifying custom colors.
An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range
[0,1]
; for example,[0.4 0.6 0.7]
.A hexadecimal color code is a character vector or a string scalar that starts with a hash symbol (
#
) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from0
toF
. The values are not case sensitive. Thus, the color codes"#FF8800"
,"#ff8800"
,"#F80"
, and"#f80"
are equivalent.
Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.
Color Name | Short Name | RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|---|---|
"red" | "r" | [1 0 0] | "#FF0000" | |
"green" | "g" | [0 1 0] | "#00FF00" | |
"blue" | "b" | [0 0 1] | "#0000FF" | |
"cyan"
| "c" | [0 1 1] | "#00FFFF" | |
"magenta" | "m" | [1 0 1] | "#FF00FF" | |
"yellow" | "y" | [1 1 0] | "#FFFF00" | |
"black" | "k" | [0 0 0] | "#000000" | |
"white" | "w" | [1 1 1] | "#FFFFFF" |
Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.
RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|
[0 0.4470 0.7410] | "#0072BD" | |
[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980] | "#D95319" | |
[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250] | "#EDB120" | |
[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560] | "#7E2F8E" | |
[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880] | "#77AC30" | |
[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330] | "#4DBEEE" | |
[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840] | "#A2142F" |
BackgroundColor
— Background color
[0.96 0.96 0.96]
(default) | RGB triplet | hexadecimal color code | 'r'
| 'g'
| 'b'
| ...
Background color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, or one of the color options listed in the table.
RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes are useful for specifying custom colors.
An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range
[0,1]
; for example,[0.4 0.6 0.7]
.A hexadecimal color code is a character vector or a string scalar that starts with a hash symbol (
#
) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from0
toF
. The values are not case sensitive. Thus, the color codes"#FF8800"
,"#ff8800"
,"#F80"
, and"#f80"
are equivalent.
Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.
Color Name | Short Name | RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|---|---|
"red" | "r" | [1 0 0] | "#FF0000" | |
"green" | "g" | [0 1 0] | "#00FF00" | |
"blue" | "b" | [0 0 1] | "#0000FF" | |
"cyan"
| "c" | [0 1 1] | "#00FFFF" | |
"magenta" | "m" | [1 0 1] | "#FF00FF" | |
"yellow" | "y" | [1 1 0] | "#FFFF00" | |
"black" | "k" | [0 0 0] | "#000000" | |
"white" | "w" | [1 1 1] | "#FFFFFF" |
Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.
RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|
[0 0.4470 0.7410] | "#0072BD" | |
[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980] | "#D95319" | |
[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250] | "#EDB120" | |
[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560] | "#7E2F8E" | |
[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880] | "#77AC30" | |
[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330] | "#4DBEEE" | |
[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840] | "#A2142F" |
Interactivity
Visible
— State of visibility
'on'
(default) | on/off logical value
State of visibility, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
,
or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
'on'
— Display the object.'off'
— Hide the object without deleting it. You still can access the properties of an invisible UI component.
To make your app start faster, set the Visible
property to
'off'
for all UI components that do not need to appear at
startup.
Editable
— Allow edit field changes
'on'
(default) | on/off logical value
Allow edit field changes, specified as 'on'
or
'off'
, or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0
(false
). A
value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and
'off'
is equivalent to false
. Thus, you can
use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off
logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
Set this property to 'on'
to allow the user to change the date
in the edit field at run time. The Enable
property must also be
set to 'on'
to allow changes in the edit field.
Enable
— Operational state
'on'
(default) | on/off logical value
Operational state, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
,
or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
If you set this property to
'on'
, the app user can interact with the component.If you set this property to
'off'
, the component appears dimmed, indicating that the app user cannot interact with it, and that it will not trigger a callback.
Tooltip
— Tooltip
''
(default) | character vector | cell array of character vectors | string array | 1-D categorical array
Tooltip, specified as a character vector, cell array of character vectors, string array, or 1-D categorical array. Use this property to display a message when the user hovers the pointer over the component at run time. The tooltip displays even when the component is disabled. To display multiple lines of text, specify a cell array of character vectors or a string array. Each element in the array becomes a separate line of text. If you specify this property as a categorical array, MATLAB uses the values in the array, not the full set of categories.
ContextMenu
— Context menu
empty GraphicsPlaceholder
array (default) | ContextMenu
object
Context menu, specified as a ContextMenu
object created using the uicontextmenu
function. Use this property to display a context menu when
you right-click on a component.
Position
Position
— Location and size
[100 100 150 22]
(default) | [left bottom width height]
Location and size of the collapsed date picker relative to the parent container, specified as a vector of the form [left bottom width height]
. This table describes each element in the vector.
Element | Description |
---|---|
left | Distance from the inner left edge of the parent container to the outer left edge of the date picker |
bottom | Distance from the inner bottom edge of the parent container to the outer bottom edge of the date picker |
width | Distance between the right and left outer edges of the date picker |
height | Distance between the top and bottom outer edges of the date picker |
All measurements are in pixel units.
InnerPosition
— Location and size
[100 100 150 22]
(default) | [left bottom width height]
Location and size of the collapsed date picker relative to the parent container,
specified as a vector of the form [left bottom width height]
. This
property value is identical to the Position
property.
OuterPosition
— Location and size
[100 100 150 22]
(default) | [left bottom width height]
Location and size of the collapsed date picker relative to the parent container,
specified as a vector of the form [left bottom width height]
. This
property value is identical to the Position
property.
Layout
— Layout options
empty LayoutOptions
array (default) | GridLayoutOptions
object
Layout options, specified as a
GridLayoutOptions
object. This property specifies options for components
that are children of grid layout containers. If the component is not a child of a grid layout
container (for example, it is a child of a figure or panel), then this property is empty and has
no effect. However, if the component is a child of a grid layout container, you can place the
component in the intended row and column of the grid by setting the Row
and
Column
properties of the GridLayoutOptions
object.
For example, this code places a date picker in the third row and second column of its parent grid.
g = uigridlayout([4 3]); d = uidatepicker(g); d.Layout.Row = 3; d.Layout.Column = 2;
To make the date picker span multiple rows or columns, specify the
Row
or Column
property as a two-element
vector. For example, this date picker spans columns 2
through
3
:
d.Layout.Column = [2 3];
Callbacks
ValueChangedFcn
— Value changed function
''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vector
Value changed function, specified as one of the following:
A function handle.
A cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.
A character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.
The ValueChangedFcn
callback executes when the user changes the date by typing in the text field or by expanding the date picker and selecting a date.
This callback function can access specific information about the user’s interaction with the
date picker. MATLAB passes this information in a ValueChangedData
object as the second argument to your callback function.
In App Designer, the argument is called event
. You can get the object
properties using dot notation. For example, event.PreviousValue
gets
the previously selected date. The ValueChangedData
object is not available to callback functions specified as character vectors.
The following table lists the properties of the ValueChangedData
object.
Property | Value |
---|---|
Value | New selected date |
PreviousValue | Previously selected date |
Source | Component that executes the callback |
EventName | 'ValueChanged' |
The ValueChangedFcn
callback does not execute when the user re-selects or
re-types the currently selected date. The callback also does not execute when the
Value
property changes programmatically.
For more information about creating callbacks in App Designer, see Callbacks in App Designer.
CreateFcn
— Creation function
''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vector
Object creation function, specified as one of these values:
Function handle.
Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.
Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.
For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Callbacks in App Designer.
This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB creates the object. MATLAB initializes all property values before executing the CreateFcn
callback. If you do not specify the CreateFcn
property, then MATLAB executes a default creation function.
Setting the CreateFcn
property on an existing component has no effect.
If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the object that is being created using the first argument of the callback function. Otherwise, use the gcbo
function to access the object.
DeleteFcn
— Deletion function
''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vector
Object deletion function, specified as one of these values:
Function handle.
Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.
Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.
For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Callbacks in App Designer.
This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB deletes the object. MATLAB executes the DeleteFcn
callback before destroying the
properties of the object. If you do not specify the DeleteFcn
property, then MATLAB executes a default deletion function.
If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the
object that is being deleted using the first argument of the callback function.
Otherwise, use the gcbo
function to access the
object.
Callback Execution Control
Interruptible
— Callback interruption
'on'
(default) | on/off logical value
Callback interruption, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
, or as
numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
This property determines if a running callback can be interrupted. There are two callback states to consider:
The running callback is the currently executing callback.
The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.
MATLAB determines callback interruption behavior whenever it executes a command that
processes the callback queue. These commands include drawnow
, figure
, uifigure
, getframe
, waitfor
, and pause
.
If the running callback does not contain one of these commands, then no interruption occurs. MATLAB first finishes executing the running callback, and later executes the interrupting callback.
If the running callback does contain one of these commands, then the
Interruptible
property of the object that owns the running
callback determines if the interruption occurs:
If the value of
Interruptible
is'off'
, then no interruption occurs. Instead, theBusyAction
property of the object that owns the interrupting callback determines if the interrupting callback is discarded or added to the callback queue.If the value of
Interruptible
is'on'
, then the interruption occurs. The next time MATLAB processes the callback queue, it stops the execution of the running callback and executes the interrupting callback. After the interrupting callback completes, MATLAB then resumes executing the running callback.
Note
Callback interruption and execution behave differently in these situations:
If the interrupting callback is a
DeleteFcn
,CloseRequestFcn
, orSizeChangedFcn
callback, then the interruption occurs regardless of theInterruptible
property value.If the running callback is currently executing the
waitfor
function, then the interruption occurs regardless of theInterruptible
property value.If the interrupting callback is owned by a
Timer
object, then the callback executes according to schedule regardless of theInterruptible
property value.
BusyAction
— Callback queuing
'queue'
(default) | 'cancel'
Callback queuing, specified as 'queue'
or 'cancel'
. The BusyAction
property determines how MATLAB handles the execution of interrupting callbacks. There are two callback states to consider:
The running callback is the currently executing callback.
The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.
The BusyAction
property determines callback queuing behavior only
when both of these conditions are met:
Under these conditions, the BusyAction
property of the
object that owns the interrupting callback determines how MATLAB handles the interrupting callback. These are possible values of the
BusyAction
property:
'queue'
— Puts the interrupting callback in a queue to be processed after the running callback finishes execution.'cancel'
— Does not execute the interrupting callback.
BeingDeleted
— Deletion status
on/off logical value
This property is read-only.
Deletion status, returned as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
MATLAB sets the BeingDeleted
property to
'on'
when the DeleteFcn
callback begins
execution. The BeingDeleted
property remains set to
'on'
until the component object no longer exists.
Check the value of the BeingDeleted
property to verify that the object is not about to be deleted before querying or modifying it.
Parent/Child
Parent
— Parent container
Figure
object (default) | Panel
object | Tab
object | ButtonGroup
object | GridLayout
object
Parent container, specified as a Figure
object
created using the uifigure
function, or one of its child
containers: Tab
, Panel
, ButtonGroup
, or GridLayout
. If no container is specified, MATLAB calls the uifigure
function to create a new Figure
object that serves as the parent container.
HandleVisibility
— Visibility of object handle
'on'
(default) | 'callback'
| 'off'
Visibility of the object handle, specified as 'on'
, 'callback'
,
or 'off'
.
This property controls the visibility of the object in its parent's
list of children. When an object is not visible in its parent's list
of children, it is not returned by functions that obtain objects by
searching the object hierarchy or querying properties. These functions
include get
, findobj
, clf
,
and close
. Objects are valid
even if they are not visible. If you can access an object, you can
set and get its properties, and pass it to any function that operates
on objects.
HandleVisibility Value | Description |
---|---|
'on' | The object is always visible. |
'callback' | The object is visible from within callbacks or functions invoked by callbacks, but not from within functions invoked from the command line. This option blocks access to the object at the command-line, but allows callback functions to access it. |
'off' | The object is invisible at all times. This option is useful
for preventing unintended changes to the UI by another function. Set
the HandleVisibility to 'off' to
temporarily hide the object during the execution of that function.
|
Identifiers
Type
— Type of graphics object
'uidatepicker'
This property is read-only.
Type of graphics object, returned as 'uidatepicker'
.
Tag
— Object identifier
''
(default) | character vector | string scalar
Object identifier, specified as a character vector or string scalar. You can specify a unique Tag
value to serve as an identifier for an object. When you need access to the object elsewhere in your code, you can use the findobj
function to search for the object based on the Tag
value.
UserData
— User data
[]
(default) | array
User data, specified as any MATLAB array. For example, you can specify a scalar, vector, matrix, cell array, character array, table, or structure. Use this property to store arbitrary data on an object.
If you are working in App Designer, create public or private properties in the app to share data instead of using the UserData
property. For more information, see Share Data Within App Designer Apps.
Object Functions
focus | Focus UI component |
Examples
Display Custom Date Format
Create a date picker that displays the date in the text field using the
dd-MM-yyyy
format. The watermark in the running app displays the
new format, and all selected dates use that format.
fig = uifigure('Position',[500 500 320 280]); d = uidatepicker(fig,'Position',[18 235 150 22]); d.DisplayFormat = 'dd-MM-yyyy';
Disable Sundays and a Holiday
Create a date picker that disables Sundays and New Year's day 2018.
fig = uifigure('Position',[500 500 375 280]); d = uidatepicker(fig,'Position',[18 225 150 22]); d.DisabledDaysOfWeek = 1; d.DisabledDates = datetime(2018,1,1);
When you expand the date picker and browse to January 2018, the first day of the year and all Sundays are disabled.
Create a Callback for Date Selection
Create a program file called mydateapp.m
that creates a figure
and a date picker with a ValueChangedFcn
callback.
function mydateapp fig = uifigure('Position',[340 400 415 300]); d = uidatepicker(fig,'DisplayFormat','MM-dd-yyyy',... 'Position',[130 190 150 22],... 'Value',datetime(2014,4,9),... 'ValueChangedFcn', @datechange); function datechange (src,event) lastdate = char(event.PreviousValue); newdate = char(event.Value); msg = ['Change date from ' lastdate ' to ' newdate '?']; % Confirm new date selection = uiconfirm(fig,msg,'Confirm Date'); if (strcmp(selection,'Cancel')) % Revert to previous selection if cancelled d.Value = event.PreviousValue; end end end
The datechange
function displays a confirmation dialog box and
determines which button the user clicks in that dialog box. The date picker reverts to
the previous date if the user clicks Cancel.
Run the program, and click a date to see the confirmation dialog box.
mydateapp
Version History
Introduced in R2018aR2021a: Specify placeholder text
Provide a short hint that describes the expected date picker input by using the
Placeholder
property.
See Also
datetime
| uidatepicker
| NaT
| App
Designer
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