A simulated workplace environment where students must demonstrate OO skills by interpreting and interacting with modern software requirements.
You are working as a junior software innovation engineer for the City of Moondalup in the Department of Transport. The department wants to upgrade a few public parking spaces by providing information about the number of available parking spots in near real time for each one. The parking lots in question do not have boom gates.
For this project, you will be using foundational agile practices:
- An emphasis on collaboration and communication
- Small rapid iterations
- Minimal, user-focused documentation (how does this help the user?)
However, because in this simulation you may have limited access to developers and customers. They have provided you with some documentation to help get you started:
│
├── docs/
│ ├── requirements.md
│ └── high_level_design.md
requirements.md
: provides a brief agile specification for the project. Please note that unlike a typical agile specifications some requirements are not-user driven but are constraints needed to achieve competency in the unit.high_level_design
: because you are a junior developer, the senior developer was asked to write a more detailed specification to help you achieve some of the more difficult aspects of this project.
To get started with this project fork and then clone this repository:
-
From the top right, press Fork. This creates a copy of the repository in your GitHub account.
-
After the forking process is complete, press the green Code button on your forked repository.
-
Copy the URL displayed under "Clone with HTTPS" by pressing the clipboard icon next to it.
-
You did copy your forked repository URL, not this repository's URL, right?
-
Open a terminal (Command Prompt or Git Bash on Windows, Terminal on macOS and Linux) on your local machine.
-
Navigate to the directory where you want to clone the repository by using the
cd
command. For example:
cd /path/to/your/directory
- Clone the repository to your local machine by running the
git clone
command followed by the copied URL:
git clone https://github.com/your-username/civ-ipriot-proj-carpark.git
- Change to the cloned repository's directory:
cd civ-ipriot-proj-carpark
- Create a new branch for your local modifications by running:
git checkout -b your-new-branch-name
Now you can make local modifications to the project files. After you have made the desired changes, follow these steps to commit and push them:
- Stage the modified files by running:
git add .
- Commit the changes with a descriptive message:
git commit -m "Your commit message here"
- Push the changes to your forked repository on GitHub:
git push origin your-new-branch-name
The setup.py
file contains information about the project, its dependencies, and how to run the main script.
To install the SmartPark project as a module in development mode, follow these steps:
- Open a terminal and navigate to the SmartPark project directory (the one containing
setup.py
). - Ensure you have a virtual environment activated for the project. If not, you can create one using:
python3 -m venv .venv
Then activate the virtual environment:
- On Linux/macOS:
source .venv/bin/activate
- On Windows:
.venv\Scripts\activate
- Install the SmartPark project in development mode using:
pip install -e .
This command installs the project in editable mode, which means any changes you make to the source code will be immediately reflected in the installed module.