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Separation of Concerns Starter


Repo Setup

  • Give each member write access to the repo (if it's a group project)
  • Turn on GitHub Pages and put a link to your website in the repo's description
  • in the Branches section of your repo's settings make sure:
    • The repository requires a review before pull requests can be merged.
    • The master/main branch must "Require status checks to pass before merging"
    • The master/main branch must "Require require branches to be up to date before merging"

Local Setup

So you're ready to start coding? If you haven't cloned this repository already you should, and then ...

  1. Clone this repository:
  2. Navigate to this repository in your local computer
    • $ cd this-repository
  3. Install the project's development dependencies - you will need these for the code quality automation:
    • $ npm install

Running the Site

This is a static website that only uses HTML, CSS and JavaScript, so you can run it using any static server - liveServer, http-server, study-lenses, ...

Navigating to demo.html will run the example website for reverse-engineering.


Developing your Code

This page is a full website so you will need to run it by opening index.html in the browser.

It's recommended that you use VSCode to write your HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Each time you make a change in VSCode you will need to go to the browser and refresh to see if it worked. Everything you have learned about the debugger will come in handy! You can use breakpoints and debugger statements to step through while your website is running.

The only code in this project that you can develop and test separately from the rest is functions in the /src/logic folder, these are pure functions that will need to test. You can develop these either in VSCode or Study Lenses.


Code Quality Automation

Writing code is hard. To write even just 10 lines there are 100 things you need to think about, and 1000 mistakes you can make. Developers are clever and lazy people. They have built tools to help with all of this.

This repository comes with features to help you and your group write good code. Some features are for checking your code manually before pushing it, and others are for checking your code automatically when you open a PR to the main/master branch.

Continuous Integration (CI)

checks on GitHub

When you open a PR to main/master in your repository, GitHub will run the workflows in ./.github/workflows. You can try the same scripts locally to make sure they will pass before pushing:

  • npm run lint:js -- ./client: Lints all the .js files in your /src folder, if there are any warnings or errors the check will fail.
  • npm run lint:css -- ./client/styles: lints all the .css files in your /styles folder, if there are any warnings or errors the check will fail.
  • npm run test -- ./client: runs all the .spec.js fils in your /src folder. If any tests fail, this check will fail.
  • npm run document: re-renders the DOCS.md file in the root of your repository, making sure that the documentation is always up to date. If the documentation script has any trouble the check will fail.

You will not be able to merge your branch until all the checks pass. These checks will be run again each time you push changes to your branch, so no worries if you don't pass the checks on your first try.

Local Checks

checks on your own computer

You can run the same checks locally to make sure you have no errors before pushing, this will make everything easier for you and your reviewer. If the checks pass locally then they should pass when you push.

  • Linting JavaScript
    • npm run lint:js -- ./path/to/file.js: lint one file at a time by passing the path to that file
    • npm run lint:js:ci: lint all of the JavaScript in /src. This is the same command that is run in GitHub so if it works locally it should pass the checks when you push.
  • Linting CSS
    • npm run lint:css -- ./path/to/file.css: lint one file at a time by passing the path to that file
    • npm run lint:css:ci: lint all of the CSS in /public. This is the same command that is run in GitHub so if it works locally it should pass the checks when you push.
  • Testing
    • npm run test -- ./path/to/file.spec.js: test one .spec.js file at a time
    • npm run test:ci: test all .spec.js files at once. This is the same command that is run in GitHub so if it works locally it should pass the checks when you push.
  • Formatting
    • npm run format -- ./path/to/file: you can format any file type with this command (.js, .css, .html, .md)
    • if you install the Prettier extension for VSCode and have it format on save, then you don't need to use this command
    • there is no extra CI check for formatting, but the linter will check some formatting. The rest is up to your code reviewer
  • Documenting
    • npm run document: render the documentation before pushing to make sure there are no errors.