This application was built with create-react-app
.
Clone down this repo.
On GitHub, create a new, empty repository and name it something like 'turing-cafe-fe'.
By the end of the assessment, update the current remote (origin) and point it at the new URL of the repository you just created on GitHub. You can read how to do this here. Once you've updated the remote, you should be able to push up to that repo after you have at least one commit.
Run npm install
to install dependencies for the repo.
Run npm start
to start up your React server.
Build a React App that displays the current reservations for the Turing Cafe!
You will have 3 hours to build this application.
We do want to see good commit habits - atomic commits that log small, focused changesets. Don't worry about creating GitHub issues, though.
Pull down the API repo. Set up instructions are in that repository's README.
Do not nest this inside your front-end repository.
Get all existing reservations on page load and display them on the DOM.
Create a controlled form component to create a reservation (look into the API documentation to see what pieces of information are expected, and what datatypes it wants each piece to be). As a user types into the input fields, the form component's state should change. When the user clicks the Make Reservation
button, the application should update the App's state. The new reservation should display with all of the existing reservations.
Do not worry about making the POST request to the database yet.
Now that the functionality is there for adding a reservation, write some tests:
- Write tests for the form component and another component (not App yet) covering what should be displayed on the page.
- Write a unit test for the form component that checks that when data is put into the form, the value is reflected in that form input.
- Write an integration test for App that tests the user flow for adding a new reservation.
When the user makes a reservation, the application should make a post request to the API. The new reservation should still exist upon reloading the page.
Keep any fetch calls you write in the App component for now
(If you have time to refactor your fetch calls into a separate helper file, that is fine, but it is NOT a requirement for this application.)
Delete a reservation when the user clicks the Cancel
button. The deletion should persist upon reloading the page.
-
Now try mocking your API calls. Try writing out a few other integration tests including happy path and sad path testing.
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Add a button or drop down so that the user has the option to sort their reservations by date from earliest to latest or latest to earliest.