Create a shopping app for walmart products.
There should be 3 main components:
- A search component
- search for a product and display the results
- clicking on a product causes the product window to display/be filled
- Product display component
- displays information about the product
- has a button to add to cart
- Cart component
- displays everything that was added to the cart
- calculates subtotal, GST and shipping (flat $7)
Add bootstrap to your app if you like.
You should begin your app with one single working component- begin with the search component on the left. The express server in the starter code has a pre-made pass-through route for you to query the walmart API. Use AJAX to make a query to this route and then use react to display the results. (see below for notes on react and this
keyword in AJAX callbacks)
Sign up for an api key here and put it in the query controller.
When you have a working component that displays the search results, you can begin on the second component. Refactor your code to store the list of results in the parent of the search component. Then use the search result the user selected to populate the second component.
You can then move on to the 3rd component to display the items the user has added to their cart from the 2nd component.
Add a carousel component to your app to display all the product images. Perhaps slick carousel npm library: https://github.com/akiran/react-slick
Add a sorting function to the search page. (just sort the results you currently have)
When the add to cart button is clicked again, add another item to the cart.
Let the user take things back out of the cart
Make each item in the cart a link. When the user clicks an item it opens in the product display tab.
Change the layout of the app to have only 2 columns. Add CSS to make the cart position:absolute
. When something is added to the cart, make the cart display. Add a button inside the cart to hide it.
Paginate your search results.
Add more of the search result attributes into the product page.
Adjust the shipping cost according to the item added to the cart.
With XMLHttpRequest
we set the response text using this
keyword.
function reqListener () {
console.log(this.responseText);
}
var oReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
oReq.addEventListener("load", reqListener);
oReq.open("GET", "http://www.example.org/example.txt");
oReq.send();
If we want to set state in a react component method we need to have access to this
keyowrd when it is the react this
.
Just create a new variable that has the react this
keyword value.
//copy the value of this in order to refer to it in another way.
var reactThis = this;
var reqListener = () => {
console.log(this.responseText);
//transform the response to real js objects
const data = JSON.parse( this.responseText );
// here, we can't do this.setState
//refer to react state instead
reactThis.setState({queryData:data});
}
var oReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
oReq.addEventListener("load", reqListener);
oReq.open("GET", "http://www.example.org/example.txt");
oReq.send();
You are provided with an API proxy route to use. Look at what it does here: https://github.com/wdi-sg/shopping-react/blob/master/src/server/controllers/query.js
You would make a request to the server with a url that looks like this: http://localhost:3000/api/query?search=bananas
You must fill in an API key.
You can register for one here: https://developer.walmartlabs.com/member/register (you don't need a real website to register)
- React (v16)
- Express.js (v4) as production and development server
- Webpack 4 (production and development configurations)
- SCSS support (+ sanitize.css included)
- ES2015+
- preconfigured router
- React Material UI example theme
- preconfigured modal windows
- preconfigured eslint and Prettier code formatter
- React Hot Loader
- Linux/MacOS/Windows
npm install -g nodemon
git clone git@github.com:antonfisher/react-express-webpack.git
cd react-express-webpack
npm install
# remove boilerplate git references
rm ./.git
# run development mode
npm run dev
# run production mode
npm run build
npm start
# run prettier
npm run prettier
# run lint
npm run lint
# run on a different port
HTTP_PORT=3001 npm run dev
MIT License. Free use and change.