Agile Development is a methodology for developing software. In this methodology you start with the simplest code you can possibly write to get things started. This can even be just empty files with the right names in the right folders! Then in small steps you add more code so that each little step works, is meaningful for the user, and is a little closer to the end goal.
This strategy is sooooo important to learn because programming is hard. All developers (even your coaches!) make mistakes all the time. The best way to manage mistakes is to work in small, understandable steps and making sure that each step works before moving on.
Working in small, meaningful steps is also important because it's impossible to plan for everything. Your understanding of the problem will evolve, you will learn better ways to write code, and the user's requirements will change over time. Working in small meaningful steps and pausing to reassess after each step makes it possible to adapt to changing requirements as you go.
Agile development is more about discipline than talent. Every minute you spend practicing this now will save you hours of debugging and make collaboration a natural part of your development process.
- Learning Objectives: what you will learn from this module
- Suggested Study: Helpful links for this module, useful but not required.
- Deliverables: Projects to practice applying the learning objectives in context
- Lesson Plans: A few ideas for running lessons around this material.
- Study Tips
- Setting Up
- Code Quality Scripts
Priorities: 🥚, 🐣, 🐥, 🐔 (click to learn more)
There is a lot to learn in this repository. If you can't master all the material at once, that's expected! Anything you don't master now will always be waiting for you to review when you need it. These 4 emoji's will help you prioritize your study time and to measure your progress:
- 🥚: Understanding this material is required, it covers the base skills you'll need for this module and the next. You do not need to finish all of them but should feel comfortable that you could with enough time.
- 🐣: You have started all of these exercises and feel you could complete them all if you just had more time. It may not be easy for you but with effort you can make it through.
- 🐥: You have studied the examples and started some exercises if you had time. You should have a big-picture understanding of these concepts/skills, but may not be confident completing the exercises.
- 🐔: These concepts or skills are not necessary but are related to this module. If you are finished with 🥚, 🐣 and 🐥 you can use the 🐔 exercises to push yourself without getting distracted from the module's main objectives.
Practice with the skills, tools, and workflows you will need to efficiently develop websites written with HTML & CSS.
- 🥚 VSCode: you can ...
- use the LiveServer extension to launch an HTML page in the browser
- use autocomplete to begin a new HTML document, create new tags, and much more
- use the HTML CSS Support and IntelliSense fo CSS class names extensions to make writing HTML & CSS more efficient
- 🥚 Formatting HTML & CSS: You can ...
- use VSCode configurations to format your code on save
- use
npm run format
to format all the code in your repository
- 🥚 Linting CSS: You can use the
npm run lint:css
script to find mistakes in your CSS, and you can fix the mistakes. - 🥚 Validating HTML: You can use the
npm run validate:html
script to find mistakes in your CSS, and you can fix the mistakes. - 🥚 Browser Developer Tools: You can ...
- inspect the source code of a web page using the Sources tab
- find any part of the web page in the Elements tab of your Dev Tools DOM inspector
- find the styles for any element in the Elements tab
- make temporary changes in a web page from the Elements tab to see how they will look
Practice working together in a group to build small websites in incremental steps according to a plan. You will be given final code, a detailed plan to rebuild it, and will need to work as a group following the processes in Planning and Collaborating.
- 🥚 Project Definition and Scope: As a group, you can agree on what you are trying to build, and can clearly describe the project using a README and a repository description.
- 🥚 Project Constraints: As a group you can define project constraints by
discussing your strengths, weaknesses and context. You can set these types of
constraints:
- External: constraints that come from outside your group
- Internal, Involuntary: constraints that come from within your group, but your group did not decide to have.
- Internal, Voluntary: constraints your group decides on to improve the quality of your development process and final software.
- 🥚 Communication Plans: You can work with your group mates to agree on a communication plan to follow during development.
- 🥚 Communicating Challenges: During development you can discuss with
your group when ...
- you are blocked and need help the agreed channels of communication.
- your schedule or availability changes
- you are having trouble getting along with each other
- 🥚 Using a Backlog: You can develop from a backlog of features
organized by priority:
- must-have
- should-have
- could-have
- 🥚 Follow a Development Strategies: You can follow a development strategy to understand the code required for must-have user stories.
- 🥚 Create Issues From a Dev Strategy: You can create issues for user stories in your project based on the development strategy.
- 🥚 Retrospective: Your group can complete a retrospective to ...
- assess how well you worked as a group
- find ways to improve in the next project
- compare your plan to the reality of developing your website
- 🐣 Claiming and Completing Issues: You can claim issues from the TODO
column of a project board and ...
- track your progress with the project board
- develop your code locally on a separate branch
- send a PR that passes CI checks and meets the requirements
- 🐣 Code Review: You can both review a group mate's PR, and productively participate in a review of your own code.
- 🐣 Match a Design & Acceptance Criteria: When developing your tasks, you can write code that matches the project's Wireframe and meets your issue's Acceptance Criteria.
Practicing writing your own plans as a group. You will be given only the final code for HTML/CSS web pages, your group will need write a detailed plan for rebuilding the website in small steps.
- 🥚 Write User Personas: As a group you can describing your site's users with User Personas, and you can use the personas to plan your website from the user's perspective.
- 🥚 Write User Stories: Given a working web page, you can describe it with user stories and acceptance criteria for each user story.
- 🐣 Write a Backlog: After listing all the user stories for a web page, you can organize them into a Backlog by priority: must-have, should-have and could-have
- 🐣 Create a Prioritized Design: Using your backlog and the original site as a guide, you can create a Wireframe of the site your group will build. You can use different colors and comments to indicate a priority for each component in the Wireframe.
- 🐣 Write a Development Strategies: You can translate your Wireframe and Backlog into a Development Strategy for the must-have user stories.
Even the best plans are not perfect, it's not possible to know everything ahead of time! You may be able to plan everything ahead of time when the web pages you build are very small and you have the code ahead of time, but it's a whole different thing when you need to build a larger web page over a longer period of time.
In this chapter you will practice full Agile Development by developing a larger, open-ended web pages and adapting your plans as you go. Your team will need to make an initial plan, but the plan will change! Practice having regular meetings with your group to review the website's progress, review your plan, and make any changes in the plan that are necessary to keep the project on schedule.
- 🐣 Adjusting the Backlog: As a group you can agree to changes in the backlog when necessary.
- 🐣 Adjusting the Design: As a group you can agree on changes to the design during the development process when it becomes clear your old design needs updating.
- 🐣 Updating the Project Board: You can manage the project board by adding, removing or updating issues when necessary. This includes changing labels, milestones, or assignees when necessary.
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- Don't rush, understand! Programming is hard.
- The examples and exercises will still be there to study later.
- It's better to fail tests slowly and learn from your mistakes than to pass tests quickly and not understand why.
- Don't skip the examples! Understanding and experimenting with working code is a very effective way to learn programming.
- Write lots of comments in the examples and exercises. The code in this repository is yours to study, modify and re-use in projects.
- Practice Pair Programming: two people, one computer.
- Take a look through the Learning From Code guide for more study tips
Creating a project board on your GitHub account for tracking your study at HYF
can help you keep track of everything you're learning. You can create the board
at this link: https://github.com/your_user_name?tab=projects
.
These 4 columns may be helpful:
- todo: material you have not studied yet
- studying: material you are currently studying
- to review: material you want to review again in the future
- learned: material you know well enough that you could help your classmates learn it
You will need NPM installed on your computer to study this material
- Clone this repository:
- using SSH:
git clone --depth 1 [email protected]:HackYourFutureBelgium/agile-development.git
- using SSH:
- navigate to the cloned repository
cd agile-development
- Install dependencies:
npm install
It's highly recommended that you use either Linux or Mac. If you have a Windows computer you can either dual-boot your computer or install a virtual machine.
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This repository comes with some scripts to check the quality of this code. You can run these scripts to check the code provided by HYF, and to check the code you write when experiment with the examples and complete the exercises.
This script will format all of the code in this repository making sure that all the indentations are correct, the code is easy to read, and letting you know if there are any syntax errors.
Checks the formatting of all files in the repository and throws an error if any files are not well-formatted.
This script will check all of the files in your repository for spelling mistakes. Spelling is not just a detail, is important! Good spelling helps others read and understand your programs with less effort.
spell-check
is not so clever though, it doesn't have all possible words in
it's dictionary and it won't know if you wanted to spell a word incorrectly.
If you think one of it's "Unknown word"s is not a problem, you can either ignore
the suggestion or add the word to the "words": [ ... ],
list in
.cspell.json.
This script will lint all the Markdown files in this repository, checking for syntax mistakes and other bad practices. Fixing linting errors will help you learn to write better code by pointing out your mistakes before they cause problems in your program.
Some linting errors will take some practice to understand and fix, but it will be a good use of time.
This script will lint the names of all files and folders in the project to check that they follow the project naming convention (kebab-case).
This script will validate the HTML in this repsitory using html-validate.