You have to build a custom DateAdapter
. A custom DateAdapter is a class which implements the DateAdapter
interface. It must have a bunch of predefined function implementations and have to be registered as a useClass
for the DateAdapter
provider.
providers: [{provide: DateAdapter, useClass: CustomDateAdapter }]
The date adapter tells the datepicker things like how to store dates/times internally, how to present them in the input and other things.
Material provided two classes which implement the DateAdapter
interface: NativeDateAdapter
and MomentDateAdapter
. They tell MatDatepicker
how to work with the javascript native Date
object and moment
object, respectively. I'll talk about the javascript native Date
object, but the same principles apply to any date representation. The javascript Date
object has some limitations (for example, it's not possible to tell it how do you want to present dates). The long story short: just extends the Material provided NativeDateAdapter
and override the functions you need. What you want to do is shown in this stackblitz demo (basically you want to override a function of the NativeDateAdapter
: getFirstDayOfWeek : () => number
) and I'll give a little overview afterwards.
getFirstDayOfWeek(): number {
return 1;
}
In the demo, you will see a custom-date-adapter.ts
. This is where you should extended the NativeDateAdapter
, overriding two functions:
1) parse: (value: any) => Date | null
2) getFirstDayOfWeek: ()=> number
The first function meant to a) among other things, create a Date
object from what the user chose in the calendar, and b) parse what is typed in the input to a Date
object.
The second function (getFirstDayOfWeek
) tells the calendar to start in a specifc week day (0 - Sunday, 1 - Monday, 2 - Tuesday ...).
Also there's an interesting format: (date: Date, displayFormat: Object) => string
function available to be implemented/overriden that allows you to define the format the date string must be shown in the input after being selected from the calendar popup.
In the demo, in the main.ts you must tell Angular that there is a custom date adapter to use (look at the providers array). In this case, I built this demo to work with Brazilian Portuguese (look at the main.ts constructor, for the date.setLocale('pt-BR')
). Over here, we present dates as dd/MM/yyy
, knowing Monday == "Segunda-Feira" in portuguese. :D
The other pre-built adapter (MomentDateAdapter
, based on Moment.js
instead of just the native Date
object) that, in some cases, saves you from building a custom date adapter, as Moment.js
already deals with locales in a more efficient way).
Hope it helps.