MyReads Project
This is the starter template for the final assessment project for Udacity's React Fundamentals course. The goal of this template is to save you time by providing a static example of the CSS and HTML markup that may be used, but without any of the React code that is needed to complete the project. If you choose to start with this template, your job will be to add interactivity to the app by refactoring the static code in this template.
Of course, you are free to start this project from scratch if you wish! Just be sure to use Create React App to bootstrap the project.
TL;DR
To get started developing right away:
- install all project dependencies with
npm install
- start the development server with
npm start
What You're Getting
βββ CONTRIBUTING.md
βββ README.md - This file.
βββ SEARCH_TERMS.md # The whitelisted short collection of available search terms for you to use with your app.
βββ package.json # npm package manager file. It's unlikely that you'll need to modify this.
βββ public
βΒ Β βββ favicon.ico # React Icon, You may change if you wish.
βΒ Β βββ index.html # DO NOT MODIFY
βββ src
βββ App.css # Styles for your app. Feel free to customize this as you desire.
βββ App.js # This is the root of your app. Contains static HTML right now.
βββ App.test.js # Used for testing. Provided with Create React App. Testing is encouraged, but not required.
βββ BooksAPI.js # A JavaScript API for the provided Udacity backend. Instructions for the methods are below.
βββ icons # Helpful images for your app. Use at your discretion.
βΒ Β βββ add.svg
βΒ Β βββ arrow-back.svg
βΒ Β βββ arrow-drop-down.svg
βββ index.css # Global styles. You probably won't need to change anything here.
βββ index.js # You should not need to modify this file. It is used for DOM rendering only.
Remember that good React design practice is to create new JS files for each component and use import/require statements to include them where they are needed.
Backend Server
To simplify your development process, we've provided a backend server for you to develop against. The provided file BooksAPI.js
contains the methods you will need to perform necessary operations on the backend:
getAll
Method Signature:
getAll()
- Returns a Promise which resolves to a JSON object containing a collection of book objects.
- This collection represents the books currently in the bookshelves in your app.
update
Method Signature:
update(book, shelf)
- book:
<Object>
containing at minimum anid
attribute - shelf:
<String>
contains one of ["wantToRead", "currentlyReading", "read"] - Returns a Promise which resolves to a JSON object containing the response data of the POST request
search
Method Signature:
search(query)
- query:
<String>
- Returns a Promise which resolves to a JSON object containing a collection of a maximum of 20 book objects.
- These books do not know which shelf they are on. They are raw results only. You'll need to make sure that books have the correct state while on the search page.
Important
The backend API uses a fixed set of cached search results and is limited to a particular set of search terms, which can be found in SEARCH_TERMS.md. That list of terms are the only terms that will work with the backend, so don't be surprised if your searches for Basket Weaving or Bubble Wrap don't come back with any results.
Create React App
This project was bootstrapped with Create React App. You can find more information on how to perform common tasks here.
Contributing
This repository is the starter code for all Udacity students. Therefore, we most likely will not accept pull requests.
For details, check out CONTRIBUTING.md.
Archival Note
This repository is deprecated; therefore, we are going to archive it. However, learners will be able to fork it to their personal Github account but cannot submit PRs to this repository. If you have any issues or suggestions to make, feel free to:
- Utilize the https://knowledge.udacity.com/ forum to seek help on content-specific issues.
- Submit a support ticket along with the link to your forked repository if (learners are) blocked for other reasons. Here are the links for the retail consumers and enterprise learners.