The front end for the Open Event Server
API Documentation:
- Every installation of the Open Event Server project includes API docs, (e.g. here on the test install https://open-event-api.herokuapp.com).
- A hosted version of the API docs is available in the
gh-pages
branch of the Open Event Server repository at http://dev.eventyay.com/api/v1
Please join our mailing list to discuss questions regarding the project :
Our chat channel is on Gitter here :
You will need the following things properly installed on your computer.
- Git
- Node.js (with NPM v5.2x)
- Bower -
npm install -g bower
- Ember CLI -
npm install -g ember-cli
- PhantomJS -
npm install -g phantomjs-prebuilt
- check-node-version -
npm install -g check-node-version
It is also recommended to have watchman installed to speed up the file-watcher/auto-build
service of the ember build server.
git clone <repository-url>
this repositorycd open-event-frontend
npm install
bower install
ember serve
- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
Make use of the many generators for code, try ember help generate
for more details.
This project has acceptance, integration and unit tests located inside the tests/
folder.
ember test
- CLI outputember test --server
- Live browser preview and console access
ember build
(development)ember build --environment production
(production)
- Frontend: https://nextgen.eventyay.com
- API server: https://eventyay.com
- Frontend: https://open-event-frontend.herokuapp.com
- API server: https://open-event-dev.herokuapp.com
- ember.js
- ember-cli
- Semantic UI
- Semantic-UI-Ember
- Development Browser Extensions
Commits
- Write clear meaningful git commit messages (Do read https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/)
- Make sure your PR's description contains GitHub's special keyword references that automatically close the related issue when the PR is merged. (More info at https://github.com/blog/1506-closing-issues-via-pull-requests )
- When you make very very minor changes to a PR of yours (like for example fixing a failing Travis build or some small style corrections or minor changes requested by reviewers) make sure you squash your commits afterward so that you don't have an absurd number of commits for a very small fix. (Learn how to squash at https://davidwalsh.name/squash-commits-git )
- When you're submitting a PR for a UI-related issue, it would be really awesome if you add a screenshot of your change or a link to a deployment where it can be tested out along with your PR. It makes it very easy for the reviewers and you'll also get reviews quicker.
Feature Requests and Bug Reports
- When you file a feature request or when you are submitting a bug report to the issue tracker, make sure you add steps to reproduce it. Especially if that bug is some weird/rare one.
Join the development
- Before you join development, please set up the project on your local machine, run it and go through the application completely. Press on any button you can find and see where it leads to. Explore. (Don't worry ... Nothing will happen to the app or to you due to the exploring 😉 Only thing that will happen is, you'll be more familiar with what is where and might even get some cool ideas on how to improve various aspects of the app.)
- If you would like to work on an issue, drop in a comment at the issue. If it is already assigned to someone, but there is no sign of any work being done, please feel free to drop in a comment so that the issue can be assigned to you if the previous assignee has dropped it entirely.
This project is currently licensed under the Apache License version 2.0.
To obtain the software under a different license, Please contact FOSSASIA.