Database Design Final Project

This is the submitted project for our (Pedro Bautista, Christiana Hellenbrand, Christopher Ragland) Database Design course at the University of South Florida.

Project Description

We are tasked with building a full-stack application that incorporates a user interface and processes for connecting to, retrieving from, and making changes to a relational database.

All team members agreed on creating a small movie database that allows the following features:

  • create a user profile
  • users can search movies that are present in the database
  • users are able to add movies to their personal "Watchlist" as well as "Favorites"
  • users are able to remove moves from their personal "Watchlist" as well as "Favorites"

more information can be found inside the project documentation.

Documentation

Above is the document containing information pertaining to the project structure and design including entity-relationship-diagrams in a document titled, "Project 4 Final Report.pdf".

Getting Started

This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.

First, run the development server:

npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
# or
pnpm dev

Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

You can start editing the page by modifying pages/index.js. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.

API routes can be accessed on http://localhost:3000/api/hello. This endpoint can be edited in pages/api/hello.js.

The pages/api directory is mapped to /api/*. Files in this directory are treated as API routes instead of React pages.

This project uses next/font to automatically optimize and load Inter, a custom Google Font.

Learn More

To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:

You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!

Deploy on Vercel

The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.

Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.