Skip to content

codeunion/Wall-B

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

48 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Wall-B

In a world where communication is only allowed over "The Internet"; ONE PROGRAMMER stands to make a "killr app".

Your mission? Create a website where people can create "Walls" anyone can add messages on.

Persistence

Wall-B will introduce you to the behavior and language surrounding the act of persisting information in a database. In order to run this application, you MUST have SQLite3 installed on your machine. Mac OS X users should automatically have SQLite3 installed, but Windows or Linux users will have to install it themselves.

Read our guide for installing SQLite3.

Running the App

  1. Fork and clone this repository
  2. bundle install --without production
  3. cp .env.example .env
  4. bundle exec rerun -c rackup # Watches your files and re-starts the app on save.

Pushing to Production

  1. Ensure you've created a heroku account, installed the heroku toolbelt, and logged in to the heroku toolbelt on your machine.
  2. heroku create
  3. git push heroku master
  4. heroku open

Functional Requirements

v[1.0]

  • ✔️ A guest may create a wall with a name, description, and author
  • ✔️ A guest may see a list of all walls by name

v[1.5]

  • A guest may click on a Wall to see its description
  • A guest may destroy a wall; but only when they provide the correct author name
  • A guest may update a wall with a new title, description; but only when they provide the correct author name

Not sure how to make this happen? The wiki should get you started!

v[2.0]

  • A guest may "like" a wall
  • A guest may see the number of likes a wall has had
  • A guest may add a message to the wall
  • A guest may "like" a message on the wall

v[2.5]

  • A guest may use a shared secret to encrypt a message on a wall.
  • A guest may use a shared secret to decrypt

Core Concepts

  1. Grouping data into your own datatypes that represent 'human' things.
  2. Storing data submitted by an http request for later retrieval and presentation with a database
  3. Creating relationships between datatypes in your database.

About

Wall/Message challenge - Web Fundamentals

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 4

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages