Have you ever had a burning desire to write totally pawesome stories about your beloved puppers?
Welcome to bArk, the app that allows you to collaborate with other doggo-aficionados to create fun and exciting stories featuring your favourite canines! Whether you want to write your own stories, contribute to others' tails (pun intended), or just put your feet up and read, there is something for all dog lovers here!
The following steps are only for one of the group members to perform.
- Create your own copy of this repo using the
Use This Template
button, ideally using the name of your project. The repo should be marked Public - Verify that the skeleton code now shows up in your repo on GitHub, you should be automatically redirected
- Clone your copy of the repo to your dev machine
- Add your team members as collaborators to the project so that they can push to this repo
- Let your team members know the repo URL so that they use the same repo (they should not create a copy/fork of this repo since that will add additional workflow complexity to the project)
- Create the
.env
by using.env.example
as a reference:cp .env.example .env
- Update the .env file with your correct local information
- username:
labber
- password:
labber
- database:
midterm
- Install dependencies:
npm i
- Fix to binaries for sass:
npm rebuild node-sass
- Reset database:
npm run db:reset
- Check the db folder to see what gets created and seeded in the SDB
- Run the server:
npm run local
- Note: nodemon is used, so you should not have to restart your server
- Visit
http://localhost:8080/
- Do not edit the
layout.css
file directly, it is auto-generated bylayout.scss
. - Split routes into their own resource-based file names, as demonstrated with
users.js
andwidgets.js
. - Split database schema (table definitions) and seeds (inserts) into separate files, one per table. See
db
folder for pre-populated examples. - Use helper functions to run your SQL queries and clean up any data coming back from the database. See
db/queries
for pre-populated examples. - Use the
npm run db:reset
command each time there is a change to the database schema or seeds.- It runs through each of the files, in order, and executes them against the database.
- Note: you will lose all newly created (test) data each time this is run, since the schema files will tend to
DROP
the tables and recreate them.
- Node 10.x or above
- NPM 5.x or above
- PG 6.x
- body-Parser ^1.20.2
- Chalk ^2.4.2
- Cookie-Session ^2.0.0
- dotenv ^2.0.0
- EJS ^2.6.2
- Express ^4.18.2
- Morgan ^1.9.1
- Node Sass Middleware ^1.0.1
- Sass ^1.62.1
- Nodemon ^2.0.22
- Eslint ^8.40.0