Found 29 repositories(showing 29)
microsoft
Tips, tricks, and resources for working with Node.js, and the start of an ongoing conversation on how we can improve the Node.js experience on Microsoft platforms.
Sairyss
Best practices, tools and guidelines for backend development. Code examples in TypeScript + NodeJS
nima0011
# Contributing to this repository <!-- omit in toc --> ## Getting started <!-- omit in toc --> Before you begin: - This site is powered by Node.js. Check to see if you're on the [version of node we support](contributing/development.md). - Have you read the [code of conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md)? - Check out the [existing issues](https://github.com/github/docs/issues) & see if we [accept contributions](#types-of-contributions-memo) for your type of issue. ### Use the 'make a contribution' button  Navigating a new codebase can be challenging, so we're making that a little easier. As you're using docs.github.com, you may come across an article that you want to make an update to. You can click on the **make a contribution** button right on that article, which will take you to the file in this repo where you'll make your changes. Before you make your changes, check to see if an [issue exists](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/) already for the change you want to make. ### Don't see your issue? Open one If you spot something new, open an issue using a [template](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/new/choose). We'll use the issue to have a conversation about the problem you want to fix. ### Ready to make a change? Fork the repo Fork using GitHub Desktop: - [Getting started with GitHub Desktop](https://docs.github.com/en/desktop/installing-and-configuring-github-desktop/getting-started-with-github-desktop) will guide you through setting up Desktop. - Once Desktop is set up, you can use it to [fork the repo](https://docs.github.com/en/desktop/contributing-and-collaborating-using-github-desktop/cloning-and-forking-repositories-from-github-desktop)! Fork using the command line: - [Fork the repo](https://docs.github.com/en/github/getting-started-with-github/fork-a-repo#fork-an-example-repository) so that you can make your changes without affecting the original project until you're ready to merge them. Fork with [GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces): - [Fork, edit, and preview](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/developing-online-with-codespaces/creating-a-codespace) using [GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces) without having to install and run the project locally. ### Make your update: Make your changes to the file(s) you'd like to update. Here are some tips and tricks for [using the docs codebase](#working-in-the-githubdocs-repository). - Are you making changes to the application code? You'll need **Node.js v14** to run the site locally. See [contributing/development.md](contributing/development.md). - Are you contributing to markdown? We use [GitHub Markdown](contributing/content-markup-reference.md). ### Open a pull request When you're done making changes and you'd like to propose them for review, use the [pull request template](#pull-request-template) to open your PR (pull request). ### Submit your PR & get it reviewed - Once you submit your PR, others from the Docs community will review it with you. The first thing you're going to want to do is a [self review](#self-review). - After that, we may have questions, check back on your PR to keep up with the conversation. - Did you have an issue, like a merge conflict? Check out our [git tutorial](https://lab.github.com/githubtraining/managing-merge-conflicts) on how to resolve merge conflicts and other issues. ### Your PR is merged! Congratulations! The whole GitHub community thanks you. :sparkles: Once your PR is merged, you will be proudly listed as a contributor in the [contributor chart](https://github.com/github/docs/graphs/contributors). ### Keep contributing as you use GitHub Docs Now that you're a part of the GitHub Docs community, you can keep participating in many ways. **Learn more about contributing:** - [Types of contributions :memo:](#types-of-contributions-memo) - [:mega: Discussions](#mega-discussions) - [:beetle: Issues](#beetle-issues) - [:hammer_and_wrench: Pull requests](#hammer_and_wrench-pull-requests) - [:question: Support](#question-support) - [:earth_asia: Translations](#earth_asia-translations) - [:balance_scale: Site Policy](#balance_scale-site-policy) - [Starting with an issue](#starting-with-an-issue) - [Labels](#labels) - [Opening a pull request](#opening-a-pull-request) - [Working in the github/docs repository](#working-in-the-githubdocs-repository) - [Reviewing](#reviewing) - [Self review](#self-review) - [Pull request template](#pull-request-template) - [Suggested changes](#suggested-changes) - [Windows](#windows) ## Types of contributions :memo: You can contribute to the GitHub Docs content and site in several ways. This repo is a place to discuss and collaborate on docs.github.com! Our small, but mighty :muscle: docs team is maintaining this repo, to preserve our bandwidth, off topic conversations will be closed. ### :mega: Discussions Discussions are where we have conversations. If you'd like help troubleshooting a docs PR you're working on, have a great new idea, or want to share something amazing you've learned in our docs, join us in [discussions](https://github.com/github/docs/discussions). ### :beetle: Issues [Issues](https://docs.github.com/en/github/managing-your-work-on-github/about-issues) are used to track tasks that contributors can help with. If an issue has a triage label, we haven't reviewed it yet and you shouldn't begin work on it. If you've found something in the content or the website that should be updated, search open issues to see if someone else has reported the same thing. If it's something new, open an issue using a [template](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/new/choose). We'll use the issue to have a conversation about the problem you want to fix. ### :hammer_and_wrench: Pull requests A [pull request](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/about-pull-requests) is a way to suggest changes in our repository. When we merge those changes, they should be deployed to the live site within 24 hours. :earth_africa: To learn more about opening a pull request in this repo, see [Opening a pull request](#opening-a-pull-request) below. ### :question: Support We are a small team working hard to keep up with the documentation demands of a continuously changing product. Unfortunately, we just can't help with support questions in this repository. If you are experiencing a problem with GitHub, unrelated to our documentation, please [contact GitHub Support directly](https://support.github.com/contact). Any issues, discussions, or pull requests opened here requesting support will be given information about how to contact GitHub Support, then closed and locked. If you're having trouble with your GitHub account, contact [Support](https://support.github.com/contact). ### :earth_asia: Translations This website is internationalized and available in multiple languages. The source content in this repository is written in English. We integrate with an external localization platform called [Crowdin](https://crowdin.com) and work with professional translators to localize the English content. **We do not currently accept contributions for translated content**, but we hope to in the future. ### :balance_scale: Site Policy GitHub's site policies are published on docs.github.com, too! If you find a typo in the site policy section, you can open a pull request to fix it. For anything else, see [the CONTRIBUTING guide in the site-policy repo](https://github.com/github/site-policy/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Starting with an issue You can browse existing issues to find something that needs help! ### Labels Labels can help you find an issue you'd like to help with. - The [`help wanted` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22help+wanted%22) is for problems or updates that anyone in the community can start working on. - The [`good first issue` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22good+first+issue%22) is for problems or updates we think are ideal for beginners. - The [`content` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Acontent) is for problems or updates in the content on docs.github.com. These will usually require some knowledge of Markdown. - The [`engineering` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Aengineering) is for problems or updates in the docs.github.com website. These will usually require some knowledge of JavaScript/Node.js or YAML to fix. ## Opening a pull request You can use the GitHub user interface :pencil2: for some small changes, like fixing a typo or updating a readme. You can also fork the repo and then clone it locally, to view changes and run your tests on your machine. ## Working in the github/docs repository Here's some information that might be helpful while working on a Docs PR: - [Development](/contributing/development.md) - This short guide describes how to get this app running on your local machine. - [Content markup reference](/contributing/content-markup-reference.md) - All of our content is written in GitHub-flavored Markdown, with some additional enhancements. - [Content style guide for GitHub Docs](/contributing/content-style-guide.md) - This guide covers GitHub-specific information about how we style our content and images. It also links to the resources we use for general style guidelines. - [Reusables](/data/reusables/README.md) - We use reusables to help us keep content up to date. Instead of writing the same long string of information in several articles, we create a reusable, then call it from the individual articles. - [Variables](/data/variables/README.md) - We use variables the same way we use reusables. Variables are for short strings of reusable text. - [Liquid](/contributing/liquid-helpers.md) - We use liquid helpers to create different versions of our content. - [Scripts](/script/README.md) - The scripts directory is the home for all of the scripts you can run locally. - [Tests](/tests/README.md) - We use tests to ensure content will render correctly on the site. Tests run automatically in your PR, and sometimes it's also helpful to run them locally. ## Reviewing We (usually the docs team, but sometimes GitHub product managers, engineers, or supportocats too!) review every single PR. The purpose of reviews is to create the best content we can for people who use GitHub. :yellow_heart: Reviews are always respectful, acknowledging that everyone did the best possible job with the knowledge they had at the time. :yellow_heart: Reviews discuss content, not the person who created it. :yellow_heart: Reviews are constructive and start conversation around feedback. ### Self review You should always review your own PR first. For content changes, make sure that you: - [ ] Confirm that the changes address every part of the content design plan from your issue (if there are differences, explain them). - [ ] Review the content for technical accuracy. - [ ] Review the entire pull request using the [localization checklist](contributing/localization-checklist.md). - [ ] Copy-edit the changes for grammar, spelling, and adherence to the style guide. - [ ] Check new or updated Liquid statements to confirm that versioning is correct. - [ ] Check that all of your changes render correctly in staging. Remember, that lists and tables can be tricky. - [ ] If there are any failing checks in your PR, troubleshoot them until they're all passing. ### Pull request template When you open a pull request, you must fill out the "Ready for review" template before we can review your PR. This template helps reviewers understand your changes and the purpose of your pull request. ### Suggested changes We may ask for changes to be made before a PR can be merged, either using [suggested changes](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/incorporating-feedback-in-your-pull-request) or pull request comments. You can apply suggested changes directly through the UI. You can make any other changes in your fork, then commit them to your branch. As you update your PR and apply changes, mark each conversation as [resolved](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/commenting-on-a-pull-request#resolving-conversations). ## Windows This site can be developed on Windows, however a few potential gotchas need to be kept in mind: 1. Regular Expressions: Windows uses `\r\n` for line endings, while Unix based systems use `\n`. Therefore when working on Regular Expressions, use `\r?\n` instead of `\n` in order to support both environments. The Node.js [`os.EOL`](https://nodejs.org/api/os.html#os_os_eol) property can be used to get an OS-specific end-of-line marker. 1. Paths: Windows systems use `\` for the path separator, which would be returned by `path.join` and others. You could use `path.posix`, `path.posix.join` etc and the [slash](https://ghub.io/slash) module, if you need forward slashes - like for constructing URLs - or ensure your code works with either. 1. Bash: Not every Windows developer has a terminal that fully supports Bash, so it's generally preferred to write [scripts](/script) in JavaScript instead of Bash.
EMETEM-GLOBAL-ENTERPRISE
# Contributing to this repository <!-- omit in toc --> ## Getting started <!-- omit in toc --> Before you begin: - This site is powered by Node.js. Check to see if you're on the [version of node we support](contributing/development.md). - Have you read the [code of conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md)? - Check out the [existing issues](https://github.com/github/docs/issues) & see if we [accept contributions](#types-of-contributions-memo) for your type of issue. ### Use the 'make a contribution' button  Navigating a new codebase can be challenging, so we're making that a little easier. As you're using docs.github.com, you may come across an article that you want to make an update to. You can click on the **make a contribution** button right on that article, which will take you to the file in this repo where you'll make your changes. Before you make your changes, check to see if an [issue exists](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/) already for the change you want to make. ### Don't see your issue? Open one If you spot something new, open an issue using a [template](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/new/choose). We'll use the issue to have a conversation about the problem you want to fix. ### Ready to make a change? Fork the repo Fork using GitHub Desktop: - [Getting started with GitHub Desktop](https://docs.github.com/en/desktop/installing-and-configuring-github-desktop/getting-started-with-github-desktop) will guide you through setting up Desktop. - Once Desktop is set up, you can use it to [fork the repo](https://docs.github.com/en/desktop/contributing-and-collaborating-using-github-desktop/cloning-and-forking-repositories-from-github-desktop)! Fork using the command line: - [Fork the repo](https://docs.github.com/en/github/getting-started-with-github/fork-a-repo#fork-an-example-repository) so that you can make your changes without affecting the original project until you're ready to merge them. Fork with [GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces): - [Fork, edit, and preview](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/developing-online-with-codespaces/creating-a-codespace) using [GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces) without having to install and run the project locally. ### Make your update: Make your changes to the file(s) you'd like to update. Here are some tips and tricks for [using the docs codebase](#working-in-the-githubdocs-repository). - Are you making changes to the application code? You'll need **Node.js v14** to run the site locally. See [contributing/development.md](contributing/development.md). - Are you contributing to markdown? We use [GitHub Markdown](contributing/content-markup-reference.md). ### Open a pull request When you're done making changes and you'd like to propose them for review, use the [pull request template](#pull-request-template) to open your PR (pull request). ### Submit your PR & get it reviewed - Once you submit your PR, others from the Docs community will review it with you. The first thing you're going to want to do is a [self review](#self-review). - After that, we may have questions, check back on your PR to keep up with the conversation. - Did you have an issue, like a merge conflict? Check out our [git tutorial](https://lab.github.com/githubtraining/managing-merge-conflicts) on how to resolve merge conflicts and other issues. ### Your PR is merged! Congratulations! The whole GitHub community thanks you. :sparkles: Once your PR is merged, you will be proudly listed as a contributor in the [contributor chart](https://github.com/github/docs/graphs/contributors). ### Keep contributing as you use GitHub Docs Now that you're a part of the GitHub Docs community, you can keep participating in many ways. **Learn more about contributing:** - [Types of contributions :memo:](#types-of-contributions-memo) - [:mega: Discussions](#mega-discussions) - [:beetle: Issues](#beetle-issues) - [:hammer_and_wrench: Pull requests](#hammer_and_wrench-pull-requests) - [:question: Support](#question-support) - [:earth_asia: Translations](#earth_asia-translations) - [:balance_scale: Site Policy](#balance_scale-site-policy) - [Starting with an issue](#starting-with-an-issue) - [Labels](#labels) - [Opening a pull request](#opening-a-pull-request) - [Working in the github/docs repository](#working-in-the-githubdocs-repository) - [Reviewing](#reviewing) - [Self review](#self-review) - [Pull request template](#pull-request-template) - [Suggested changes](#suggested-changes) - [Windows](#windows) ## Types of contributions :memo: You can contribute to the GitHub Docs content and site in several ways. This repo is a place to discuss and collaborate on docs.github.com! Our small, but mighty :muscle: docs team is maintaining this repo, to preserve our bandwidth, off topic conversations will be closed. ### :mega: Discussions Discussions are where we have conversations. If you'd like help troubleshooting a docs PR you're working on, have a great new idea, or want to share something amazing you've learned in our docs, join us in [discussions](https://github.com/github/docs/discussions). ### :beetle: Issues [Issues](https://docs.github.com/en/github/managing-your-work-on-github/about-issues) are used to track tasks that contributors can help with. If an issue has a triage label, we haven't reviewed it yet and you shouldn't begin work on it. If you've found something in the content or the website that should be updated, search open issues to see if someone else has reported the same thing. If it's something new, open an issue using a [template](https://github.com/github/docs/issues/new/choose). We'll use the issue to have a conversation about the problem you want to fix. ### :hammer_and_wrench: Pull requests A [pull request](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/about-pull-requests) is a way to suggest changes in our repository. When we merge those changes, they should be deployed to the live site within 24 hours. :earth_africa: To learn more about opening a pull request in this repo, see [Opening a pull request](#opening-a-pull-request) below. ### :question: Support We are a small team working hard to keep up with the documentation demands of a continuously changing product. Unfortunately, we just can't help with support questions in this repository. If you are experiencing a problem with GitHub, unrelated to our documentation, please [contact GitHub Support directly](https://support.github.com/contact). Any issues, discussions, or pull requests opened here requesting support will be given information about how to contact GitHub Support, then closed and locked. If you're having trouble with your GitHub account, contact [Support](https://support.github.com/contact). ### :earth_asia: Translations This website is internationalized and available in multiple languages. The source content in this repository is written in English. We integrate with an external localization platform called [Crowdin](https://crowdin.com) and work with professional translators to localize the English content. **We do not currently accept contributions for translated content**, but we hope to in the future. ### :balance_scale: Site Policy GitHub's site policies are published on docs.github.com, too! If you find a typo in the site policy section, you can open a pull request to fix it. For anything else, see [the CONTRIBUTING guide in the site-policy repo](https://github.com/github/site-policy/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Starting with an issue You can browse existing issues to find something that needs help! ### Labels Labels can help you find an issue you'd like to help with. - The [`help wanted` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22help+wanted%22) is for problems or updates that anyone in the community can start working on. - The [`good first issue` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22good+first+issue%22) is for problems or updates we think are ideal for beginners. - The [`content` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Acontent) is for problems or updates in the content on docs.github.com. These will usually require some knowledge of Markdown. - The [`engineering` label](https://github.com/github/docs/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Aengineering) is for problems or updates in the docs.github.com website. These will usually require some knowledge of JavaScript/Node.js or YAML to fix. ## Opening a pull request You can use the GitHub user interface :pencil2: for some small changes, like fixing a typo or updating a readme. You can also fork the repo and then clone it locally, to view changes and run your tests on your machine. ## Working in the github/docs repository Here's some information that might be helpful while working on a Docs PR: - [Development](/contributing/development.md) - This short guide describes how to get this app running on your local machine. - [Content markup reference](/contributing/content-markup-reference.md) - All of our content is written in GitHub-flavored Markdown, with some additional enhancements. - [Content style guide for GitHub Docs](/contributing/content-style-guide.md) - This guide covers GitHub-specific information about how we style our content and images. It also links to the resources we use for general style guidelines. - [Reusables](/data/reusables/README.md) - We use reusables to help us keep content up to date. Instead of writing the same long string of information in several articles, we create a reusable, then call it from the individual articles. - [Variables](/data/variables/README.md) - We use variables the same way we use reusables. Variables are for short strings of reusable text. - [Liquid](/contributing/liquid-helpers.md) - We use liquid helpers to create different versions of our content. - [Scripts](/script/README.md) - The scripts directory is the home for all of the scripts you can run locally. - [Tests](/tests/README.md) - We use tests to ensure content will render correctly on the site. Tests run automatically in your PR, and sometimes it's also helpful to run them locally. ## Reviewing We (usually the docs team, but sometimes GitHub product managers, engineers, or supportocats too!) review every single PR. The purpose of reviews is to create the best content we can for people who use GitHub. :yellow_heart: Reviews are always respectful, acknowledging that everyone did the best possible job with the knowledge they had at the time. :yellow_heart: Reviews discuss content, not the person who created it. :yellow_heart: Reviews are constructive and start conversation around feedback. ### Self review You should always review your own PR first. For content changes, make sure that you: - [ ] Confirm that the changes address every part of the content strategy plan from your issue (if there are differences, explain them). - [ ] Review the content for technical accuracy. - [ ] Review the entire pull request using the [localization checklist](contributing/localization-checklist.md). - [ ] Copy-edit the changes for grammar, spelling, and adherence to the style guide. - [ ] Check new or updated Liquid statements to confirm that versioning is correct. - [ ] Check that all of your changes render correctly in staging. Remember, that lists and tables can be tricky. - [ ] If there are any failing checks in your PR, troubleshoot them until they're all passing. ### Pull request template When you open a pull request, you must fill out the "Ready for review" template before we can review your PR. This template helps reviewers understand your changes and the purpose of your pull request. ### Suggested changes We may ask for changes to be made before a PR can be merged, either using [suggested changes](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/incorporating-feedback-in-your-pull-request) or pull request comments. You can apply suggested changes directly through the UI. You can make any other changes in your fork, then commit them to your branch. As you update your PR and apply changes, mark each conversation as [resolved](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/commenting-on-a-pull-request#resolving-conversations). ## Windows This site can be developed on Windows, however a few potential gotchas need to be kept in mind: 1. Regular Expressions: Windows uses `\r\n` for line endings, while Unix based systems use `\n`. Therefore when working on Regular Expressions, use `\r?\n` instead of `\n` in order to support both environments. The Node.js [`os.EOL`](https://nodejs.org/api/os.html#os_os_eol) property can be used to get an OS-specific end-of-line marker. 1. Paths: Windows systems use `\` for the path separator, which would be returned by `path.join` and others. You could use `path.posix`, `path.posix.join` etc and the [slash](https://ghub.io/slash) module, if you need forward slashes - like for constructing URLs - or ensure your code works with either. 1. Bash: Not every Windows developer has a terminal that fully supports Bash, so it's generally preferred to write [scripts](/script) in JavaScript instead of Bash.
AryamanTewari
MyMoviePlan Project 4 DESCRIPTION Create a dynamic and responsive web application for booking movie tickets online for different genres and languages. Background of the problem statement: NMS Cinemas is a chain of single screen theatres that screen movie shows of different genres and languages at very genuine prices. It was established in 2004 in Pune, India. Recently, the business analysts noticed a decline in sales since 2010. They found out that the online booking of movie tickets from apps, such as BookMyShow and Paytm were gaining more profit by eliminating middlemen from the equation. As a result, the team decided to hire a Full Stack developer to develop an online movie ticket booking web application with a rich and user-friendly interface. You are hired as the Full Stack Java developer and are asked to develop the web application. The management team has provided you with the requirements and their business model so that you can easily arrange different components of the application. Features of the application: Registration Login Payment gateway Searching Filtering Sorting Dynamic data Responsive and compatible with different devices Recommended technologies: Database management: MySQL and Oracle Backend logic: Java programming, NodeJS Frontend development: JSP, Angular, Bootstrap, HTML/CSS, and Javascript Automation and testing technologies: Selenium, Jasmine, and TestNG DevOps and production technologies: Git, GitHub, Jenkins, Docker, Kubernetes, and AWS Project development guidelines: The project will be delivered within four sprints with every sprint delivering a minimal viable product. It is mandatory to perform proper sprint planning with user stories to develop all the components of the project. The learner can use any technology from the above-mentioned technologies for different layers of the project. The web application should be responsive and should fetch or send data dynamically without hardcoded values. The learner must maintain the version of the application over GitHub and every new change should be sent to the repository. The learner must implement a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins. The learner should also deploy and host the application on an AWS EC2 instance. The learner should also implement automation testing before the application enters the CI/CD pipeline. The learner should use Git branching to do basic automation testing of the application in it separately. The learner should make a rich frontend of the application, which is user- friendly and easy for the user to navigate through the application. There will be two portals in the application, namely admin and user portal. Admin Portal: It deals with all the backend data generation and product information. The admin user should be able to: Add or remove different genres to or from the application to build a rich product line Edit movie details like name, ticket price, language, description, and show timings to keep it aligned to the current prices Enable or disable the movie shows from the application User Portal: It deals with the user activities. The end-user should be able to: Sign-in to the application to maintain a record of activities Search for movie tickets based on the search keyword Apply filters and sort results based on different genres Add all the selected movie tickets to a cart and customize the purchase at the end Experience a seamless payment process Receive a booking summary page once the payment is complete
gmkhussain
Nodeized: NodeJS Guidelines, Techniques, Tips and Tricks
Mscitsid
Create a dynamic and responsive Java e-healthcare web application for ordering medicines of different categories. Background of the problem statement: Medicare is a company that supplies medicines and a couple of other healthcare essentials at an affordable price. It was established in 2012 in Delhi, India. It had been serving fine all these years, however, the business analysts noticed a decline in sales since 2017. They found out that online ordering of medicines with companies, such as 100mg and mfine are gaining more profits by eliminating middlemen from the equation. As a result, the team decided to hire a Full Stack developer to develop a healthcare web application with a rich and user-friendly interface. You are hired as the Full Stack Java developer and are asked to develop the web application. The management team has provided you with the requirements and their business model so that you can easily arrange different components of the application. Features of the application: Registration Login Payment gateway Searching Filtering Sorting Dynamic data Responsive and compatible with different devices Recommended technologies: Database management: MySQL and Oracle Backend logic: Java programming, NodeJS Frontend development: JSP, Angular, Bootstrap, HTML/CSS, and Javascript Automation and testing technologies: Selenium, Jasmine (frontend testing), and TestNG DevOps and production technologies: Git, GitHub, Jenkins, Docker, Kubernetes, and AWS Project development guidelines: The project will be delivered within four sprints with every sprint delivering a minimal viable product. It is mandatory to perform proper sprint planning with user stories to develop all the components of the project. The learner can use any technology from the above-mentioned technologies for different layers of the project. The web application should be responsive and should fetch or send data dynamically without hardcoded values. The learner must maintain the version of the application over GitHub and every new change should be sent to the repository. The learner must implement a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins. The learner should also deploy and host the application on an AWS EC2 instance. The learner should also implement automation testing before the application enters the CI/CD pipeline. The learner should use Git branching to do basic automation testing of the application in it separately. The learner should make a rich frontend of the application, which is user-friendly and easy for the user to navigate through the application. There will be two portals in the application, namely admin and user portal. Admin Portal: The admin portal deals with all the backend data generation and product information. The admin user should be able to: Add or remove medicine details from the application to build a rich product line Edit medicine details like name, price, seller, product description, and offers to keep the product information updated with the current prices Enable or disable a medicine product User Portal: It deals with the user activities. The end-user should be able to: Sign-in to the application to maintain a record of activities Search for products based on the search keyword Apply filters and sort results based on different cuisines to get the best deals Add all the selected food items to the cart and customize the purchase at the end Perform a seamless payment gateway Get an order summary details page once the payment is complete
ymartel06
API.js: Some guidelines to make your API thanks to NodeJs
ApalaSandeepReddy
DESCRIPTION Create a dynamic and responsive online food delivery web application for ordering food items of different cuisines from a restaurant. Background of the problem statement: Foodbox is a restaurant chain that delivers food items of different cuisines at affordable prices. It was established in 2014 in Bengaluru, India. It had been serving fine all these years, however, the business analysts noticed a decline in sales since 2016. They found out that the online ordering of food items with companies, such as Swiggy and Foodpanda were gaining more profit by eliminating middlemen from the equation. As a result, the team decided to hire a Full Stack developer to develop an online food delivery web application with a rich and user-friendly interface. You are hired as the Full Stack Java developer and are asked to develop the web application. The management team has provided you with the requirements and their business model so that you can easily arrange different components of the application. Features of the application: Registration Login Payment gateway Searching Filtering Sorting Dynamic data Responsive and compatible with different devices Recommended technologies: Database management: MySQL and Oracle Backend logic: Java programming, NodeJS Frontend development: JSP, Angular, Bootstrap, HTML/CSS, and Javascript Automation and testing technologies: Selenium, Jasmine, and TestNG DevOps and production technologies: Git, GitHub, Jenkins, Docker, Kubernetes, and AWS Project development guidelines: The project will be delivered within four sprints with every sprint delivering a minimal viable product. It is mandatory to perform proper sprint planning with user stories to develop all the components of the project. The learner can use any technology from the above-mentioned technologies for different layers of the project. The web application should be responsive and should fetch or send data dynamically without hardcoded values. The learner must maintain the version of the application over GitHub and every new change should be sent to the repository. The learner must implement a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins. The learner should also deploy and host the application on an AWS EC2 instance. The learner should also implement automation testing before the application enters the CI/CD pipeline. The learner should use Git branching to do basic automation testing of the application in it separately. The learner should make a rich frontend of the application, which is user- friendly and easy for the user to navigate through the application. There will be two portals in the application, namely admin and user portal. Admin Portal: The admin portal deals with all the backend data generation and product information. The admin user should be able to: Add or remove different cuisines to or from the application to build a rich product line Edit food item details like name, price, cuisine, description, and offers to keep it aligned to the current prices Enable or disable the food items User Portal: It deals with the user activities. The end-user should be able to: Sign-in to the application to maintain a record of activities Search for food items based on the search keyword Apply filters and sort results based on different cuisines to get the best deals Add all the selected food items to a cart and customize the purchase at the end Perform a seamless payment process Get an order summary details page once the payment is complete
UlisesGascon
DEPRECATED
abenhamdine
Guidelines and ressources to define a nodejs application architecture
ch-pp-rs
A brief example of how to run nodeJS app in docker complying to the 12 Factor App guidelines
tonuidavies
Material Foundation ===================  Material Design version of Foundation for Sites by Zurb **Supported Foundation Version**: 6.2.0 **Demo**: [http://eucalyptuss.github.io/material-foundation/](http://eucalyptuss.github.io/material-foundation/) ## Requirements You'll need to have the following items installed before continuing. * [Node.js](http://nodejs.org): Use the installer provided on the NodeJS website. * [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/): Run `[sudo] npm install -g grunt-cli` * [Bower](http://bower.io): Run `[sudo] npm install -g bower` ## Quickstart ```bash git clone https://github.com/eucalyptuss/material-foundation.git cd material-foundation npm install && bower install ``` While you're working on your project, run: `grunt watch` to make grunt watch and compile all your CSS and javascript, or run: `grunt` to compile files manually ## Directory Structure scss/ * `material-foundation.scss`: Main CSS file * `demo.scss`: CSS for the preview purposes, don't mind it * `scss/_global.scss`: global settings * `scss/_foundation.scss`: the rest of original Foundation's code is imported here ## How to use Material Foundation 1. Import `material-foundation.scss` to your stylesheet (the same way it is done in the demo file). 2. Set your primary and accent colors using the `$foundation-palette` variable and override any other variables if necessary. Include the variables **before** the `material-foundation` stylesheet. 3. Include `material-foundation.js` before your closing `</body>` tag. And that's it! ## How to use Material Foundation with an existing Foundation project To use Material Foundation with an existing Foundation project you can simply replace the Foundation with Material Foundation and everything should work as expected. However, due to the differences between Foundation and Material Design Guidelines, some of the Material Foundation components are not based on the original Foundation's markup. To use them in your project you have to use the Material Foundation specific classes, e.g. `floating-action-button` to use a Floating Action Button. To view how the original Foundation components behave with the Material Foundation styles check the [Kitchen Sink](.github.io/tonuidavies)) on the Material Design website.
mynameiscsk
Create a dynamic and responsive web application for booking movie tickets online for different genres and languages. Background of the problem statement: NMS Cinemas is a chain of single screen theatres that screen movie shows of different genres and languages at very genuine prices. It was established in 2004 in Pune, India. Recently, the business analysts noticed a decline in sales since 2010. They found out that the online booking of movie tickets from apps, such as BookMyShow and Paytm were gaining more profit by eliminating middlemen from the equation. As a result, the team decided to hire a Full Stack developer to develop an online movie ticket booking web application with a rich and user-friendly interface. You are hired as the Full Stack Java developer and are asked to develop the web application. The management team has provided you with the requirements and their business model so that you can easily arrange different components of the application. Features of the application: Registration Login Payment gateway Searching Filtering Sorting Dynamic data Responsive and compatible with different devices Recommended technologies: Database management: MySQL and Oracle Backend logic: Java programming, NodeJS Frontend development: JSP, Angular, Bootstrap, HTML/CSS, and Javascript Automation and testing technologies: Selenium, Jasmine, and TestNG DevOps and production technologies: Git, GitHub, Jenkins, Docker, Kubernetes, and AWS Project development guidelines: The project will be delivered within four sprints with every sprint delivering a minimal viable product. It is mandatory to perform proper sprint planning with user stories to develop all the components of the project. The learner can use any technology from the above-mentioned technologies for different layers of the project. The web application should be responsive and should fetch or send data dynamically without hardcoded values. The learner must maintain the version of the application over GitHub and every new change should be sent to the repository. The learner must implement a CI/CD pipeline using Jenkins. The learner should also deploy and host the application on an AWS EC2 instance. The learner should also implement automation testing before the application enters the CI/CD pipeline. The learner should use Git branching to do basic automation testing of the application in it separately. The learner should make a rich frontend of the application, which is user- friendly and easy for the user to navigate through the application. There will be two portals in the application, namely admin and user portal. Admin Portal: It deals with all the backend data generation and product information. The admin user should be able to: Add or remove different genres to or from the application to build a rich product line Edit movie details like name, ticket price, language, description, and show timings to keep it aligned to the current prices Enable or disable the movie shows from the application User Portal: It deals with the user activities. The end-user should be able to: Sign-in to the application to maintain a record of activities Search for movie tickets based on the search keyword Apply filters and sort results based on different genres Add all the selected movie tickets to a cart and customize the purchase at the end Experience a seamless payment process Receive a booking summary page once the payment is complete
heartsantor
nodejs-guidelines
singhailraviraj
NodeJs Guidelines Fresher/Intermediate
90TechSAS
Guidelines for 90Tech NodeJS APIs
StantonKovacek
No description available
kessler
Node.js coding conventions and guidelines
Guidelines CRUD operation by- MongoDB, Express, NodeJs
santiph
Nodejs + Express based REST Api for Guidelines app
sheikirfanbasha
General guidelines with respect html, css and nodejs while building a website
joel-winterton
Web application used to plan budgets made in NodeJS using AirBNB coding guidelines
A Yeoman generator to generate Nodejs microservices following architectural guidelines and best practices.
Isutomu
Project made according to [guidelines](https://www.theodinproject.com/lessons/node-path-nodejs-members-only).
kales0
Simple nodejs chat server following airbnb guidelines that's parsed with eslint and built with babeljs
Jayeshuttam
Flickr Flights is the flight reservation app.It is designed based on material Ui guidelines and works with nodeJs with Java RetroFit API.It has all the features which the website version has.
V01D544
owasp-password-strength-test is a password-strength tester based off of the OWASP Guidelines for enforcing secure passwords. It is lightweight, extensible, has no dependencies, and can be used on the server (nodejs) or in-browser. owasp-password-strength-test is not an OWASP project - it is merely based off of OWASP research.
Janak2396
Online company who provides travel guidelines and Covid-19 countrywide restrictions. This company also suggests a available tours and activities based on searched destination location within the radius of 1-20kms. In addition to tour and activities, using travel advisor user can get details to book preferred tour/activity. Technology used are HTML , CSS, React, Nodejs and firebase database
All 29 repositories loaded