- Feel free to use Google, your notes, books, etc. but work on your own
- If you refer to the solution of another coach or student, please put a link to that in your README
- If you have a partial solution, still check in a partial solution
- You must submit a pull request to this repo with your code next Monday morning
Please start by forking this repo, then clone your fork to your local machine. Work into that directory.
We are going to write a small terminal program allowing the user to manage a shop database containing some items and orders.
As a shop manager
So I can know which items I have in stock
I want to keep a list of my shop items with their name and unit price.
As a shop manager
So I can know which items I have in stock
I want to know which quantity (a number) I have for each item.
As a shop manager
So I can manage items
I want to be able to create a new item.
As a shop manager
So I can know which orders were made
I want to keep a list of orders with their customer name.
As a shop manager
So I can know which orders were made
I want to assign each order to their corresponding item.
As a shop manager
So I can know which orders were made
I want to know on which date an order was placed.
As a shop manager
So I can manage orders
I want to be able to create a new order.
Here's an example of the terminal output your program should generate (yours might be slightly different — that's totally OK):
Welcome to the shop management program!
What do you want to do?
1 = list all shop items
2 = create a new item
3 = list all orders
4 = create a new order
1 [enter]
Here's a list of all shop items:
#1 Super Shark Vacuum Cleaner - Unit price: 99 - Quantity: 30
#2 Makerspresso Coffee Machine - Unit price: 69 - Quantity: 15
(...)
In this unit, you integrated a database by using the PG
gem, and test-driving and building Repository classes. You can continue to use this approach when building this challenge.
You'll also need to mock IO in your integration or unit tests, since the program will ask for user input.
Please ensure you have the following AT THE TOP of your spec_helper.rb in order to have test coverage stats generated on your pull request:
require 'simplecov'
require 'simplecov-console'
SimpleCov.formatter = SimpleCov::Formatter::MultiFormatter.new([
SimpleCov::Formatter::Console,
# Want a nice code coverage website? Uncomment this next line!
# SimpleCov::Formatter::HTMLFormatter
])
SimpleCov.start
You can see your test coverage when you run your tests. If you want this in a graphical form, uncomment the HTMLFormatter
line and see what happens!