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CS2113/T 2020 Aug-Dec
  • Full Timeline
  • Week 1 [Mon, Aug 10th]
  • Week 2 [Fri, Aug 14th]
  • Week 3 [Fri, Aug 21st]
  • Week 4 [Fri, Aug 28th]
  • Week 5 [Fri, Sep 4th]
  • Week 6 [Fri, Sep 11th]
  • Week 7 [Fri, Sep 18th]
  • Week 8 [Fri, Oct 2nd]
  • Week 9 [Fri, Oct 9th]
  • Week 10 [Fri, Oct 16th]
  • Week 11 [Fri, Oct 23rd]
  • Week 12 [Fri, Oct 30th]
  • Week 13 [Fri, Nov 6th]
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  • repl.it link
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  •  Individual Project (iP):
  • Individual Project Info
  • iP Upstream Repo
  • iP Code Dashboard
  • iP Progress Dashboard

  •  Team Project (tP):
  • Reference AB3
  • Team Project Info
  • Team List
  • tP Code Dashboard
  • tP Progress Dashboard
  • iP: Week 4iP: Week 6


    iP: Week 5

    1. Learn from others (optional)
    2. Add Increment as a branch: Level-5
    3. Add Increment: A-Packages

    1 Learn from others (optional)

    • You can use the iP Code Dashboard to view others' iP code, using the Links → iP Code Dashboard item in the top navigation menu. Click on the </> icon corresponding to a student name to see the code written by that person. We encourage you to read others’ code and learn from them. If you adopt solutions from others (also encouraged), please follow our reuse policy.

    Policy on reuse

    Reuse is encouraged. However, note that reuse has its own costs (such as the learning curve, additional complexity, usage restrictions, and unknown bugs). Furthermore, you will not be given credit for work done by others. Rather, you will be given credit for reusing work done by others.

    • You are allowed to reuse work from your classmates, subject to following conditions:
      • The work has been shared publicly by us or the authors.
      • You clearly give credit to the original author(s).
    • You are allowed to reuse work from external sources, subject to following conditions:
      • The work comes from a source of 'good standing' (such as an established open source project). This means you cannot reuse code written by an outside 'friend'.
      • You clearly give credit to the original author. Acknowledge use of third party resources clearly e.g. in the welcome message, splash screen (if any) or under the 'about' menu. If you are open about reuse, you are less likely to get into trouble if you unintentionally reused something copyrighted.
      • You do not violate the license under which the work has been released. Please  do not use 3rd-party images/audio in your software unless they have been specifically released to be used freely. Just because you found it in the Internet does not mean it is free for reuse.
      • Always get permission from us before you reuse third-party libraries. Please post your 'request to use 3rd party library' in our forum. That way, the whole class get to see what libraries are being used by others.

    Giving credit for reused work

    Given below are how to give credit for things you reuse from elsewhere. These requirements are specific to this module i.e., not applicable outside the module (outside the module you should follow the rules specified by your employer and the license of the reused work)

    If you used a third party library:

    • iP/tP: Mention in the README file (under the Acknowledgements section)
    • tP: Mention in the Project Portfolio Page if the library has a significant relevance to the features you implemented

    If you reused code snippets found on the Internet e.g. from StackOverflow answers or
    referred code in another software or
    referred project code by current/past student:

    • If you read the code to understand the approach and implemented it yourself, mention it as a comment
      Example:
      //Solution below adapted from https://stackoverflow.com/a/16252290
      {Your implmentation of the reused solution here ...}
    • If you copy-pasted a non-trivial code block (possibly with minor modifications renaming, layout changes, changes to comments, etc.), also mark the code block as reused code (using @@author tags with the -reused suffix)
      Format:
      //@@author {yourGithubUsername}-reused
      //{Info about the source...}

      {Reused code (possibly with minor modifications) here ...}

      //@@author
      Example of reusing a code snippet (with minor modifications):
      persons = getList()
      //@@author johndoe-reused
      //Reused from https://stackoverflow.com/a/34646172 with minor modifications
      Collections.sort(persons, new Comparator<CustomData>() {
      @Override
      public int compare(CustomData lhs, CustomData rhs) {
      return lhs.customInt > rhs.customInt ? -1 : 0;
      }
      });
      //@@author
      return persons;
     

    Adding @@author tags indicate authorship

    • Mark your code with a //@@author {yourGithubUsername}. Note the double @.
      The //@@author tag should indicates the beginning of the code you wrote. The code up to the next //@@author tag or the end of the file (whichever comes first) will be considered as was written by that author. Here is a sample code file:

      //@@author johndoe
      method 1 ...
      method 2 ...
      //@@author sarahkhoo
      method 3 ...
      //@@author johndoe
      method 4 ...
    • If you don't know who wrote the code segment below yours, you may put an empty //@@author (i.e. no GitHub username) to indicate the end of the code segment you wrote. The author of code below yours can add the GitHub username to the empty tag later. Here is a sample code with an empty author tag:

      method 0 ...
      //@@author johndoe
      method 1 ...
      method 2 ...
      //@@author
      method 3 ...
      method 4 ...
    • The author tag syntax varies based on file type e.g. for java, css, fxml. Use the corresponding comment syntax for non-Java files.
      Here is an example code from an xml/fxml file.

      <!-- @@author sereneWong -->
      <textbox>
      <label>...</label>
      <input>...</input>
      </textbox>
      ...
    • Do not put the //@@author inside java header comments.
      👎

      /**
      * Returns true if ...
      * @@author johndoe
      */

      👍

      //@@author johndoe
      /**
      * Returns true if ...
      */

    What to and what not to annotate

    • Annotate both functional and test code There is no need to annotate documentation files.

    • Annotate only significant size code blocks that can be reviewed on its own e.g., a class, a sequence of methods, a method.
      Claiming credit for code blocks smaller than a method is discouraged but allowed. If you do, do it sparingly and only claim meaningful blocks of code such as a block of statements, a loop, or an if-else statement.

      • If an enhancement required you to do tiny changes in many places, there is no need to annotate all those tiny changes; you can describe those changes in the Project Portfolio page instead.
      • If a code block was touched by more than one person, either let the person who wrote most of it (e.g. more than 80%) take credit for the entire block, or leave it as 'unclaimed' (i.e., no author tags).
      • Related to the above point, if you claim a code block as your own, more than 80% of the code in that block should have been written by yourself. For example, no more than 20% of it can be code you reused from somewhere.
      • GitHub has a blame feature and a history feature that can help you determine who wrote a piece of code.
    • Do not try to boost the quantity of your contribution using unethical means such as duplicating the same code in multiple places. In particular, do not copy-paste test cases to create redundant tests. Even repetitive code blocks within test methods should be extracted out as utility methods to reduce code duplication. Individual members are responsible for making sure code attributed to them are correct. If you notice a team member claiming credit for code that he/she did not write or use other questionable tactics, you can email us (after the final submission) to let us know.

    • If you wrote a significant amount of code that was not used in the final product,

      • Create a folder called {project root}/unused
      • Move unused files (or copies of files containing unused code) to that folder
      • use //@@author {yourGithubUsername}-unused to mark unused code in those files (note the suffix unused) e.g.
      //@@author johndoe-unused
      method 1 ...
      method 2 ...

      Please put a comment in the code to explain why it was not used.

    • If you reused code from elsewhere, mark such code as //@@author {yourGithubUsername}-reused (note the suffix reused) e.g.

      //@@author johndoe-reused
      method 1 ...
      method 2 ...
    • You can use empty @@author tags to mark code as not yours when RepoSense attribute the code to you incorrectly.

      • Code generated by the IDE/framework, should not be annotated as your own.

      • Code you modified in minor ways e.g. adding a parameter. These should not be claimed as yours but you can mention these additional contributions in the Project Portfolio page if you want to claim credit for them.

     

    At the end of the project each student is required to submit a Project Portfolio Page.

    PPP Objectives

    • For you to use (e.g. in your resume) as a well-documented data point of your SE experience
    • For evaluators to use as a data point for evaluating your project contributions

    PPP Sections to include

    • Overview: A short overview of your product to provide some context to the reader. The opening 1-2 sentences may be reused by all team members. If your product overview extends beyond 1-2 sentences, the remainder should be written by yourself.
    • Summary of Contributions --Suggested items to include:
      • Code contributed: Give a link to your code on tP Code Dashboard. The link is available in the Project List Page -- linked to the icon under your profile picture.
      • Enhancements implemented: A summary of the enhancements you implemented.
      • Contributions to documentation: Which sections did you contribute to the UG?
      • Contributions to the DG: Which sections did you contribute to the DG? Which UML diagrams did you add/updated?
      • Contributions to team-based tasks :
      • Review/mentoring contributions: Links to PRs reviewed, instances of helping team members in other ways
      • Contributions beyond the project team:
        • Evidence of helping others e.g. responses you posted in our forum, bugs you reported in other team's products,
        • Evidence of technical leadership e.g. sharing useful information in the forum

    Team-tasks are the tasks that someone in the team has to do.

    Here is a non-exhaustive list of team-tasks:

    1. Setting up the GitHub team org/repo
    2. Necessary general code enhancements
    3. Setting up tools e.g., GitHub, Gradle
    4. Maintaining the issue tracker
    5. Release management
    6. Updating user/developer docs that are not specific to a feature e.g. documenting the target user profile
    7. Incorporating more useful tools/libraries/frameworks into the product or the project workflow (e.g. automate more aspects of the project workflow using a GitHub plugin)

    Keep in mind that evaluators will use the PPP to estimate your project effort. We recommend that you mention things that will earn you a fair score e.g., explain how deep the enhancement is, why it is complete, how hard it was to implement etc..

    • [Optional] Contributions to the Developer Guide (Extracts): Reproduce the parts in the Developer Guide that you wrote. Alternatively, you can show the various diagrams you contributed.
    • [Optional] Contributions to the User Guide (Extracts): Reproduce the parts in the User Guide that you wrote.

    PPP Format

    To convert the UG/DG/PPP into PDF format, go to the generated page in your project's github.io site and use this technique to save as a pdf file. Using other techniques can result in poor quality resolution (will be considered a bug) and unnecessarily large files.

    Ensure hyperlinks in the pdf files work. Your UG/DG/PPP will be evaluated using PDF files during the PE. Broken/non-working hyperlinks in the PDF files will be considered as bugs and will count against your project score. Again, use the conversion technique given above to ensure links in the PDF files work.

    The icon indicates team submissions. Only one person need to submit on behalf of the team but we recommend that others help verify the submission is in order i.e., the responsibility for (and any penalty for problems in) team submissions are best shared by the whole team rather than burden one person with it.

    The icon indicates individual submissions.

    PPP Page Limit

    Content Recommended Hard Limit
    Overview + Summary of contributions 0.5-1 2
    [Optional] Contributions to the User Guide 1
    [Optional] Contributions to the Developer Guide 3
    • The page limits given above are after converting to PDF format. The actual amount of content you require is actually less than what these numbers suggest because the HTML → PDF conversion adds a lot of spacing around content.

    2 Add Increment as a branch: Level-5

    • Do each increment as a Git branch. Here is an example:
      • Start a branch named branch-{increment ID} (e.g. branch-Level-5). You are recommended to have multiple commits in that branch. Follow the branch naming convention exactly or else our gradings scripts might miss your branch.
      • After the increment is ready, merge the branch-Level-5 back on to master, without a fast-forward so that git creates a separate commit for the merge. git tag that merge commit as Level-5.
      • Push the branch to your fork so that the bot can detect it. As before, push the tag as well.
      • Advanced git users: do not delete the branch after merging.
    Duke Level-5: Handle Errors

    Level 5. Handle Errors

    Teach Duke to deal with errors such as incorrect inputs entered by the user.

    Example:

    todo
    ____________________________________________________________
    ☹ OOPS!!! The description of a todo cannot be empty.
    ____________________________________________________________

    blah
    ____________________________________________________________
    ☹ OOPS!!! I'm sorry, but I don't know what that means :-(
    ____________________________________________________________

    When implementing this feature, you are also recommended to implement the following extension:

    A-Exceptions

         Use Exceptions to handle errors

    Use exceptions to handle errors. For example, define a class DukeException to represent exceptions specific to Duke.

    • Minimal: handle at least the two types of errors shown in the example above.
    • Stretch goal: handle all possible errors in the current version. As you evolve Duke, continue to handle errors related to the new features added.

    3 Add Increment: A-Packages

    • Recommended: if you are new to git, do this as a separate branch too (for additional practice), similar to how you did Level-5 (branch name branch-A-Packages).
    Duke A-Packages: Organize into Packages optional

    A-Packages

         Divide classes into packages

    Organize the classes into suitable java packages.

    • Minimal: put all classes in one package e.g., duke
    • Stretch goal: divide into multiple packages as the number of classes increase e.g., duke.task, duke.command


    iP: Week 4iP: Week 6