Difference between revisions of "Module 9"

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Keep in mind that you don't have to understand what every line of code does. Whenever in doubt, refer to the default app.
 
Keep in mind that you don't have to understand what every line of code does. Whenever in doubt, refer to the default app.
  
 +
You will be making changes on both the server side (the /server directory of your app) and the client side (in the /public directory)
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#* Server Side:
 +
Model: add model files to the /server/models folder. There are Mongoose files that define the objects, they are referenced by the controllers.
 +
View: nothing to change
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Controller: add controller file(s) for your models (/server/controllers), they are referenced by the routing file
 +
Routing: add a js file in /server/routes folder that responds to client side requests (same format as the one in the default app)
 +
#* Client Side
 +
Model: nothing to change
 +
View: (/public/views directory) views are .html files. Each view that requires data from the server side should be tied to a controller, inside the controller, you can specify methods to update/save/delete objects in the DB,  the view and routing section gives an example
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Controller: add controller files to /public/controllers. Easy once you go through the AngularJS tutorial. You may need to add multiple services in the /public/services directory (tutorial part 11, and the default MEAN app) to use data received from the back end and persist data across views (look up ngCookie, $cookieStore or the HTML 5 localStorage solution).
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Routing: /public/routes directory of your app. Add entries for all views you will use, and specify their urls and templates (stored in /public/views).
  
 
== Grading ==
 
== Grading ==

Revision as of 17:06, 15 May 2014


This module introduces MEAN, a fullstack web framework that uses MongoDB, Express, AngularJS and Node.js.
You have already learned (some things) about Node.js. In this module, you will be introduced to other three new technologies. Don’t frown yet, the goal of this module is to expose you to the concept of web frameworks and prepare you for the creative project. You are not required to be an expert in all of these technologies, however, it’s important to understand the basics of each and how they work together. Follow along the tutorials and complete exercises to learn how things work, and you will be ready to create your own web applications using the MEAN stack very soon!


Reading

The following articles on the online class wiki textbook contain information that will help you complete the assignment.

Individual Assignments

Tutorials

Make sure you go through tutorials for both MongoDB and AngularJS, and understand how Express works.

Install MEAN

Follow the steps and install MEAN on your machine, initialize an app and type grunt in your terminal to start the server (make sure your mongoDB server is connected and running). Open up the app in your browser (localhost:3000), and understand what the default app does.


Group Project

  • Make an e-commerce site using the MEAN stack.


To start, come up with use cases for your site. Think about what products the site is selling, what the user can do, and how information is stored etc.

You may start with the default MEAN.io app and build on top of it. This way you don't have to implement user authentication. You can also create a MEAN package and start from there.
You may use phone models provided by the Angular Phone Catalog app as your products. Review the MongoDB section on how to import JSON data into MongoDB.

Tips

Review the "Getting MEAN" section to understand the file system so you know how components work with each other. Keep in mind that you don't have to understand what every line of code does. Whenever in doubt, refer to the default app.

You will be making changes on both the server side (the /server directory of your app) and the client side (in the /public directory)

    • Server Side:

Model: add model files to the /server/models folder. There are Mongoose files that define the objects, they are referenced by the controllers. View: nothing to change Controller: add controller file(s) for your models (/server/controllers), they are referenced by the routing file Routing: add a js file in /server/routes folder that responds to client side requests (same format as the one in the default app)

    • Client Side

Model: nothing to change View: (/public/views directory) views are .html files. Each view that requires data from the server side should be tied to a controller, inside the controller, you can specify methods to update/save/delete objects in the DB, the view and routing section gives an example Controller: add controller files to /public/controllers. Easy once you go through the AngularJS tutorial. You may need to add multiple services in the /public/services directory (tutorial part 11, and the default MEAN app) to use data received from the back end and persist data across views (look up ngCookie, $cookieStore or the HTML 5 localStorage solution). Routing: /public/routes directory of your app. Add entries for all views you will use, and specify their urls and templates (stored in /public/views).

Grading

We will be grading the following aspects of your work. There are 100 points total.

  1. Working E-commerce Site (75 points)
    • MEAN installed and set up correctly (10 points).
    • Models set up correctly (15 points).
      including products, orders, and adding payment and shipping address to the user model, you don't have to use phones from the Angular tutorial but you are responsible for populating your products table
    • Can display a list of all products, can search, can view details (15 points).
    • Can add to cart, view cart, cart sustains (data can be accessed across views and shouldn't be lost when page is refreshed) (20 points).
    • Can check out (5 points).
      A user can check out if she has a payment option and a shipping address, on a successful checkout, the cart should be emptied
    • Can view orders, delete orders (10 points).
      An order is associated to a user and should contain at least four fields: date, total, number of products, shipped to
  2. Design and Misc (5 Points):
    • Site is overall user friendly and utilizes Bootstrap (3 points).
    • App passes JShint with no errors (2 points)
  3. Creative Portion (20 Points):
    • TBD