A calendar starter integrated with Google Spreadsheet.
The target audiences are Event Organizers or Meetups π
Have you ever manage multiple events at the same time that you have to share with people? It can be a hard task, due to all the possible things that can happen: new events, changes of date or someone remove/cancel his event. This starter is to help you with that!
It groups all the events submitted via Google Form, which are stored inside a Google Spreadsheet and then displays all of them inside beautiful Calendars. As the only way of adding events is Google Form, this is a 100% collaborative application with the power of editing the entries by the owner or by you (the Admin).
- Gatsby
- Grommet: A react-based framework that provides accessibility, modularity, responsiveness, and Theming in a tidy package
- Dynamic content from Google Spreadsheet
- Offline support
- A11y support: content and navigation ready for screen readers.
- PWA ready
- SEO
- Responsive design
- Icons from grommet-icons
- Netlify Deployment Friendly
- Developer tools:
- eslint
- prettier
If you never used Gatsby before, I highly recommend you to set up your development environment!
To copy and install this starter run this command:
$ gatsby new event-calendar https://github.com/EmaSuriano/gatsby-starter-event-calendar
The main data source of this starter is a Google Spreadsheet linked with a Google Form, so the first thing we have to do is create one. Here you can create the questions that the user have to complete to submit the form, in my case I have the following structure:
The text you pick for all the questions can differ from mine, then inside the application, you can apply an alias inside the GraphQL Query
Once the form created, you need to generate a Spreadsheet from it. For that, move to the Responses Tab and click on the green Spreadsheet logo which says "View Responses in Sheets". This will create a Spreadsheet that will be automatically updated when someone makes a new entry inside the form. This will be the source of the application.
Next, you need to have access from the application to read the Spreadsheet. You need to navigate to your Google API Dashboard and then go to Credentials which is on the left panel. There you click on "Create credentials" and add a new Service account key.
You'll be redirected to a new page to create the service account key, just make sure the option of "App Engine default service account" is selected and the key type marked as JSON. Click on the Create button and you will download a JSON file with your credentials, copy the value of client_email
and share the spreadsheet with that mail, and that's it! This is how you enable to read the document from an external application π
The last step is to configure our application to know from where it has to fetch the data, this is going to be made by using environment variables
. You need to create a file called .env
inside the root of the directory, with the following structure:
PRIVATE_KEY=// your private_key
PRIVATE_KEY_ID=// your private_key_id
PROJECT_ID=// your project_id
Then go to gatsby-config.js
and look for the options of gatsby-source-google-sheets
, and change the values of:
spreadsheetId
: you can find this value inside the URL of the spreadsheet.https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/[spreadsheetId]
worksheetTitle
: this is the name of the sheet from which you want to read the information.
Now you are ready to start the project, fetching all the events inside the Spreadsheet and displaying Calendars with them!
> yarn
> yarn start
The way that Gatsby works to fetch data is by using Graphql StaticQuery. It receives a prop called query
where you define which information we want from our Graphql layer and another prop render
which is a function that receives the result of the query with all the data.
In this case, you don't need the whole render to adapt the project to your questions, just by changing the query
will be enough π
Graphql queries have a concept called alias
that allows renaming a variable the query, and this is exactly what you need to properly map all the questions.
This an example of my query
:
import { graphql } from 'gatsby'
const SPREADSHEET_QUERY = graphql`
query eventsQuery {
allGoogleSheetEventsRow {
edges {
node {
id
eventName: whatisthename
date: when
place: where
eventLink: linktotheevent
}
}
}
}
`
The important part here it's that you have to use the same names on the left part of the query.
The name of the variables of your spreadsheet is the name of the columns, which are a short version of the question (removing caps, spaces, and symbols). So in the case that your first question is "Name of the event", the resulting query will be:
import { graphql } from 'gatsby'
const SPREADSHEET_QUERY = graphql`
query eventsQuery {
allGoogleSheetEventsRow {
edges {
node {
id
eventName: nameoftheevent
date: when
place: where
eventLink: linktotheevent
}
}
}
}
`
One more thing if you've never worked with Gatsby before, it provides a Graphql playground where you can try your queries without the overhead of recompiling the project. I highly recommend using it to generate your own query for the events.
Inside the root folder, there is a file called appConfig.js
, which allow you to customize the starter with your own preferences. It has the following structure:
{
"title": "Gatsby Starter Event Calendar",
"subTitle": "The easiest option to share events!",
"formLink": "https://goo.gl/forms/u00WBxeK1kQco0uQ2",
"maxAmountEvents": 2,
"limitMonthInTheFuture": 2,
"theme": {}
}
All these values can be changed by the developer and in case one of them it's not defined they all have default values. Inside the application, these values are being accessed using the component called ConfigContext
which is a basic implementation of React Context
.
Grommet
has a prop called theme when the developer can set all the colors that are going to be used inside the application. Therefore there are some standard
colors, like background
and text
, but there is a whole object just to configure how the Calendar
is going to look like.
You can change any of the existing themes or create your own following this structure:
{
"background": "white",
"brand": "pink",
"secondary": "violet",
"focus": "pink",
"text": "black",
"calendar": {
"today": {
"background": "pink",
"text": "violet",
"border": "grey"
},
"day": {
"background": "white",
"text": "black",
"border": "grey"
},
"past": {
"background": "lightgrey",
"text": "black",
"border": "grey"
},
"empty": {
"background": "lightblue",
"border": "grey"
},
"weekdays": {
"background": "white",
"text": "black",
"border": "grey"
},
"event": {
"background": "white",
"text": "black"
},
"modal": {
"text": "black",
"background": "white"
}
}
}
Inside the folder themes you can find a few examples I made to show how versatile is the theming in this application. Here are some screenshots:
Change the name of the variables of below to 3 this project is using.
As we are dealing with environment variables, the .env
file is excluded from .gitignore
file. Therefore, in order to deploy the website you have to send PRIVATE_KEY
, PRIVATE_KEY_ID
and PROJECT_ID
with the build
command.
PRIVATE_KEY=xxxxx PRIVATE_KEY_ID=yyyyy PROJECT_ID=wwwww yarn build
The result will be stored inside the public
folder so you can upload to your web host. I highly suggest using this starter with Netlify when you can define which command will build the project and also send the environment variables inside the website configuration π
Event calendar starter is an SPA (Single Page Application), so basically it has only two pages:
- Index.js (the page itself)
- 404.js (nice 404 error page that match the style)
The structure for the main page is the following:
<PageLayout>
<Hero />
<Calendar>
<Month />
<Month />
</Calendar>
<ModalEvent />
</PageLayout>
PageLayout
is the main of the application, it creates the ConfigContext
where we have access to all the information inside appConfig.js
and renders Grommet
wrapper with the theme of the application.
Hero
display almost all the information define in appConfig
, like title, subtitle and a Button
that redirect to the formLink
so people can add a new event from the page.
Calendar
is in charge of executing the query to get the events, then group them by month and render a Month
component with the grouped events. The amount of rendered Month
can be changed inside appConfig.js
.
ModalEvent
is the popup that is going to be shown when someone clicks on a day with events, and it renders the information of all the events for that day.
As Gatsby is a static website generator we need to make a new deploy to get the new data from the Spreadsheet. This can be seen as a drawback, but it's of the key why Gatsby is so fast.
When it comes to deployment there are many alternatives, like Github Pages, Netlify, Heroku and many many more. Independently of which one you choose, none of them has the ability to watch for changes inside our Spreadsheet, and they shouldn't because it's not their job.
To attack this problem I use an application called Zapier. The idea behind is creating flows of action, defining a Trigger (something that needs to happen) and some actions (what should happen after).
For this project, the rule is: If someone adds/edits/removes a new event, trigger a new deploy. And this it looks in Zapier π
I came with the idea of creating this starter after making a page for a friend with the same concept but it was totally attached to only one spreadsheet and lots of hardcoded information.
Therefore this starter is not perfect! I did my best to abstract all the logic to configuration files and I hope you find the code understandable and readable π
I'm totally for new PRs with bug fixes, change in Documentation, and new features to the starter π
MIT.