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A guide to the Button stack that onboards developers by having them build a simple to-do app.

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Onboarding Guide: Todo App

A guide to help developers onboard to the Button stack by building a simple todo app.

The goals are:

  1. Create a working todo app in order to learn by discovery, decoupled from any project-specific context in which this stack may be used.

  2. Make a series of draft pull requests against the main branch for the purposes of demonstration / archive and peer review.

Previous solutions by other developers are accessible in this repository's pull requests; viewer's discretion is advised 😉.

Preparation

Ensure that:

  1. Postgres is installed.
  2. Sqitch is installed (requires a working Perl 5 installation).
  3. Node is installed.
  4. This repository has been cloned, or forked somewhere that you have push permissions and can share your solutions with your team.
  5. For each step, you have checked out a new branch with your name as a prefix: myname/this-step
  6. After completing a step, create a draft pull request with the previous step's branch as the base; these pull requests are not intended to be merged.
  7. Request review from someone who can help.

User Stories

As a user, I can:

  • View all todos
  • Mark existing todos as completed
  • Add new todos to the list
  • See the list in the same state between browser refreshes
Todo list demo

Step 1: Database

  1. Ensure a Postgres service is running.
  2. Create a new database for the purpose of this project.
  3. Create a schema/ folder for database things, and from there initialize a new Sqitch project.
  4. Use Sqitch to create a new schema, todo_app in the project database.

* Note: Entities' dependencies (such as a table that depends on a schema) can be expressed to Sqitch at the time of creation using the --requires flag. These will show up n the sqitch.plan in square brackets next to the name of the created entity. Sqitch will ensure dependencies are deployed first.

  1. Use Sqitch to create a table in this schema* (see note) with the following attributes:
  • id
  • task
  • completed
  • date_created
  • date_updated

Pro tip: Insert some seed data into this table for testing the next few steps.

Step 2: Postgraphile API

Postgraphile can generate a GraphQL API based on our Postgres database, so for the sake of simplicity for this project, there's no need to build a Node backend.

  1. npm init to initialize a package.json for the project.
  2. Install Postgraphile and run it pointing at the project's database.
  3. Open the Graphiql (a graphical UI for GraphQL queries) instance that should be live at /graphiql on localhost once Postgraphile is running.
  4. Confirm that GraphQL is introspecting your Postgres schema by querying the todos you inserted in the previous step.

Step 3: Front end

  1. Use Create React App with Typescript to bootstrap the client:

npx create-react-app client --template typescript

  1. Add Relay to the client.

Step 4: Build TodoList components

  1. Build TodoList and TodoListItem components, each using a Relay fragment for data.
  2. Ensure that data requirements for each component are specified using GraphQL. Using Graphiql can help you refine this.

Step 5: Build CreateTodo component

Make a simple mutation-based component for adding new todos to the list.

Step 6: Write unit tests

Use Jest to test client side components.

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A guide to the Button stack that onboards developers by having them build a simple to-do app.

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