Please direct contribution interests to the new repository, OperationCode/front-end. This repository is moving towards deprecation as we work on re-implementing the website with better practices, a better developer experience, better SEO, and much better performance.
Welcome to our frontend repository built using React and Express! We highly recommend joining our organization to receive an invite to our Slack team. From there, you'll want to join the #oc-projects
channel. You can get help from multiple professional developers and people who have worked on the application since day 1!
Before contributing, please review our GitHub Workflow in the contributing guide.
For information about the maintainers of the project, check out MAINTAINERS.md.
Prerequisites:
- Yarn
- Docker
- MacOS or Linux with a globally installed and available
git
- For Windows User quick start installation
yarn
yarn run backend
If the command doesn't work the first time, run it again.
In another shell tab:
yarn start
If you're an experienced developer, please navigate to our Quick Start Guide.
When you visit our website you're interacting with two systems, a frontend application and a backend application. The frontend application (where you are now) is responsible for displaying images, text and data on our web pages. Frontend applications are usually written using a combination of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript and utilize one or more frameworks such as Angular, Backbone, Vue, and React. https://operationcode.org uses React.
The backend is responsible for providing data to the front end to display, and processing data entered into the frontend, and running various jobs like inviting new users to Slack, or signing them up for our newsletter. The https://operationcode.org backend is written in Rails and can be viewed at https://github.com/OperationCode/operationcode_backend.
Our backend API blueprint:
We are using Apiary.io for our Backend documentation. It also includes a Mocking Server so you don't have to stand up the whole backend. You just need to hit the Mock API endpoints for whatever it is you're testing.
To use, navigate to Apiary.io.
For example, you want to gather all CodeSchool Members. Click on CodeSchool | Collection
on the left-hand side. Select List All CodeSchool Members
.
A form will populate. You can switch to an Example Code in the language of your choosing. More than likely it will be JavaScript on the front-end.
In the drop-down menu, select Mock Server
and click on Try
.
You will see a GET
request with the mock endpoint url. You can now copy and paste that into your front-end to test your code.
Don't forget to remove the mock endpoint url when committing your changes for production. Reset your values and select Production
to get the correct endpoint url.
Want to contribute to this repo? Check out our comprehensive Contributing Guide
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.