By: Team W14-B3
Since: Jan 2018
Licence: MIT
- 1. Setting up
- 2. Design
- 3. Implementation
- 4. Documentation
- 5. Testing
- 6. Dev Ops
- Appendix A: Suggested Programming Tasks to Get Started
- Appendix B: Product Scope
- Appendix C: User Stories
- Appendix D: Use Cases
- Appendix E: Non Functional Requirements
- Appendix F: Glossary
- Appendix G: Product Survey
- Appendix H: Instructions for Manual Testing
- H.1. Launch and Shutdown
- H.2. Adding a student
- H.3. Showing info panel or resume
- H.4. Scheduling an interview
- H.5. Rating a student
- H.6. Editing a rating
- H.7. Deleting a rating
- H.8. Sorting the students list
- H.9. Updating status of a student
- H.10. Filtering according to multiple fields
- H.11. Finding every field of the student
- H.12. Finding specific field of the student
-
JDK
1.8.0_60
or laterℹ️Having any Java 8 version is not enough.
This app will not work with earlier versions of Java 8. -
IntelliJ IDE
ℹ️IntelliJ by default has Gradle and JavaFx plugins installed.
Do not disable them. If you have disabled them, go toFile
>Settings
>Plugins
to re-enable them.
-
Fork this repo, and clone the fork to your computer
-
Open IntelliJ (if you are not in the welcome screen, click
File
>Close Project
to close the existing project dialog first) -
Set up the correct JDK version for Gradle
-
Click
Configure
>Project Defaults
>Project Structure
-
Click
New…
and find the directory of the JDK
-
-
Click
Import Project
-
Locate the
build.gradle
file and select it. ClickOK
-
Click
Open as Project
-
Click
OK
to accept the default settings -
Open a console and run the command
gradlew processResources
(Mac/Linux:./gradlew processResources
). It should finish with theBUILD SUCCESSFUL
message.
This will generate all resources required by the application and tests.
-
Run the
seedu.address.MainApp
and try a few commands -
Run the tests to ensure they all pass.
This project follows oss-generic coding standards. IntelliJ’s default style is mostly compliant with ours but it uses a different import order from ours. To rectify,
-
Go to
File
>Settings…
(Windows/Linux), orIntelliJ IDEA
>Preferences…
(macOS) -
Select
Editor
>Code Style
>Java
-
Click on the
Imports
tab to set the order-
For
Class count to use import with '*'
andNames count to use static import with '*'
: Set to999
to prevent IntelliJ from contracting the import statements -
For
Import Layout
: The order isimport static all other imports
,import java.*
,import javax.*
,import org.*
,import com.*
,import all other imports
. Add a<blank line>
between eachimport
-
Optionally, you can follow the UsingCheckstyle.adoc document to configure Intellij to check style-compliance as you write code.
After forking the repo, links in the documentation will still point to the se-edu/addressbook-level4
repo. If you plan to develop this as a separate product (i.e. instead of contributing to the se-edu/addressbook-level4
) , you should replace the URL in the variable repoURL
in DeveloperGuide.adoc
and UserGuide.adoc
with the URL of your fork.
Set up Travis to perform Continuous Integration (CI) for your fork. See UsingTravis.adoc to learn how to set it up.
After setting up Travis, you can optionally set up coverage reporting for your team fork (see UsingCoveralls.adoc).
ℹ️
|
Coverage reporting could be useful for a team repository that hosts the final version but it is not that useful for your personal fork. |
Optionally, you can set up AppVeyor as a second CI (see UsingAppVeyor.adoc).
ℹ️
|
Having both Travis and AppVeyor ensures your App works on both Unix-based platforms and Windows-based platforms (Travis is Unix-based and AppVeyor is Windows-based) |
When you are ready to start coding,
-
Get some sense of the overall design by reading Section 2.1, “Architecture”.
-
Take a look at Appendix A, Suggested Programming Tasks to Get Started.
The Architecture Diagram given above explains the high-level design of the App. Given below is a quick overview of each component.
💡
|
The .pptx files used to create diagrams in this document can be found in the diagrams folder. To update a diagram, modify the diagram in the pptx file, select the objects of the diagram, and choose Save as picture .
|
Main
has only one class called MainApp
. It is responsible for,
-
At app launch: Initializes the components in the correct sequence, and connects them up with each other.
-
At shut down: Shuts down the components and invokes cleanup method where necessary.
Commons
represents a collection of classes used by multiple other components. Two of those classes play important roles at the architecture level.
-
EventsCenter
: This class (written using Google’s Event Bus library) is used by components to communicate with other components using events (i.e. a form of Event Driven design) -
LogsCenter
: Used by many classes to write log messages to the App’s log file.
The rest of the App consists of four components.
Each of the four components
-
Defines its API in an
interface
with the same name as the Component. -
Exposes its functionality using a
{Component Name}Manager
class.
For example, the Logic
component (see the class diagram given below) defines it’s API in the Logic.java
interface and exposes its functionality using the LogicManager.java
class.
The Sequence Diagram below shows how the components interact for the scenario where the user issues the command delete 1
.
ℹ️
|
Note how the Model simply raises a AddressBookChangedEvent when the Address Book data are changed, instead of asking the Storage to save the updates to the hard disk.
|
The diagram below shows how the EventsCenter
reacts to that event, which eventually results in the updates being saved to the hard disk and the status bar of the UI being updated to reflect the 'Last Updated' time.
ℹ️
|
Note how the event is propagated through the EventsCenter to the Storage and UI without Model having to be coupled to either of them. This is an example of how this Event Driven approach helps us reduce direct coupling between components.
|
The sections below give more details of each component.
API : Ui.java
The UI consists of a MainWindow
that is made up of parts e.g.CommandBox
, ResultDisplay
, PersonListPanel
, StatusBarFooter
, BrowserPanel
etc. All these, including the MainWindow
, inherit from the abstract UiPart
class.
The UI
component uses JavaFx UI framework. The layout of these UI parts are defined in matching .fxml
files that are in the src/main/resources/view
folder. For example, the layout of the MainWindow
is specified in MainWindow.fxml
The UI
component,
-
Executes user commands using the
Logic
component. -
Binds itself to some data in the
Model
so that the UI can auto-update when data in theModel
change. -
Responds to events raised from various parts of the App and updates the UI accordingly.
XYZCommand
and Command
in Figure 6, “Structure of the Logic Component”API :
Logic.java
-
Logic
uses theAddressBookParser
class to parse the user command. -
This results in a
Command
object which is executed by theLogicManager
. -
The command execution can affect the
Model
(e.g. adding a person) and/or raise events. -
The result of the command execution is encapsulated as a
CommandResult
object which is passed back to theUi
.
Given below is the Sequence Diagram for interactions within the Logic
component for the execute("delete 1")
API call.
API : Model.java
The Model
,
-
stores a
UserPref
object that represents the user’s preferences. -
stores the Address Book data.
-
exposes an unmodifiable
ObservableList<Person>
that can be 'observed' e.g. the UI can be bound to this list so that the UI automatically updates when the data in the list change. -
does not depend on any of the other three components.
API : Storage.java
The Storage
component,
-
can save
UserPref
objects in json format and read it back. -
can save the Address Book data in xml format and read it back.
This section describes some noteworthy details on how certain features are implemented.
The rate
command allows Talent Acquisition Specialists to evaluate candidates' performance in interviews against four specific criteria, namely technical skills, communication skills, problem solving skills and experience. The format of this command is rate INDEX t/TECHNICAL SKILLS SCORE c/COMMUNICATINO SKILLS SCORE p/PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS SCORE e/EXPERIENCE SCORE
.
In our current implementation, the rate
command inherits from the UndoableCommand
class. Two components, Logic
and Model
, are involved in the execution of this command. The Logic
component is responsible for parsing user inputs while the Model
component deals with updating of filtered person list.
Below is a sequence diagram that illustrates how these two components interact when the rate
command is executed:
Figure 3.1.1.1 Sequence diagram to illustrate component interactions for the rate
command
As shown above, execution of the rate
command comprises the following steps:
-
LogicManager
invokesparseCommand
method ofAddressbookParser
, taking user inputs as arguments. -
During the
parseCommand
method call, an instance ofRateCommandParser
will be created when the keyword "rate" is matched.RateCommandParser
then extracts the remaining user inputs and aRateCommand
instancer
will be returned provided that the format of user’s input is correct. -
LogicManager
then callsexecuteUndoableCommand
of theRateCommand
,r
, instantiated in step 2. Another component,Model
, will be involved as theRateCommand
requests to update the rating scores of the person. -
The
Model
component gets the filtered persons list and replacesPerson
p1 withPerson
p2 which is identical to p2 except rating scores. ACommandResult
will be generated and returned toLogicManager
.
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Implement a new command class
RateCommand
that supports adding rating scores andRatingEditCommand
to handle editing of rating scores-
Pros: Results in more customisable commands that can be easily modified to support more prefixes and additional rating criteria
-
Cons: Complicates the system as users need to familiarise themselves with more commands
-
-
Alternative 2: Extend the original
EditCommand
to allow it to add and modify rating scores of a student-
Pros: Minimises the number of commands users have to remember to execute tasks, making the application more user-friendly
-
Cons: Requires substantial changes to
EditCommandParser
and hence harder to implement
-
The sort
command supports the listing of students in HR+ based on GPA, name or overall rating in ascending or descending order as specified by the user. The format of this sort
command is sort FIELD o/SORT ORDER
.
As sorting is not undoable, this command inherits from the Command
class instead of the UndoableCommand
class. The sorting mechanism is mainly facilitated by Logic
and ModelManager
. SortCommandParser
residing in LogicManager
processes user inputs and creates a corresponding SortCommand
. ModelManager
will then invoke appropriate sorting methods in UniquePersonList
.
The following sequence diagrams depict the interactions between LogicManager
and ModelManager
when a user issues a request for sorting:
Figure 3.2.1.1 Sequence diagrams for execution of sort
command
As seen from the sequence diagram above, LogicManager
and ModelManager
interact in the following way:
-
When a user keys in
sort gpa o/desc
,LogicManager
calls methodparser
inAddressBookParser
. -
SortCommandParser
is instantiated. If the user input is of the correct format, aSortCommand
will be successfully created and returned back toLogicManager
. Suppose the inputs are not valid or the format of the command is invalid, an exception will be thrown and users will see an error message. -
LogicManager
proceeds to invokeexecute
method ofSortCommand
. -
ModelManager
is in charge of sorting the list of persons through calling relevant methods provided inAddressBook
andUniquePersonList
according to the field to be sorted by.
Currently, HR+ only allows users to sort the list of students by selected fields in ascending or descending order. This is achieved by encapsulating acceptable sorting orders and fields into SortOrder
and SortField
of the type enum
respectively.
In order to make Person objects comparable, additional methods need to be implemented in the Person
class to compare different Person
objects based on GPA, name and rating scores. The following code snippet demonstrates how these methods are implemented:
/**
* Compares the overall ratings of two {@code Person} objects.
* @param p1
* @param p2
* @return 1 if p1 has a higher overall rating, 0 if p1 and p2 have equal overall rating and -1 otherwise.
*/
public static int compareByOverallRating(Person p1, Person p2) {
return Double.compare(p1.getRating().getOverallScore(),
p2.getRating().getOverallScore());
}
To sort the list based on a particular field, we used the sort
method from Java’s Collections
library. An example usage is shown below:
/**
* Sorts the list based on GPA in ascending order
*/
public void sortPersonsGradePointAverageAsc() {
Collections.sort(internalList, Person::compareByGradePointAverage);
}
/**
* Sorts the list based on GPA in descending order
*/
public void sortPersonsGradePointAverageDesc() {
Collections.sort(internalList, Person::compareByGradePointAverage);
Collections.reverse(internalList);
}
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Implement a more generic
SortCommand
that sorts the list of students based on parameters supplied by the user-
Pros: It is easier to modify
SortCommand
to support more fields to be sorted by. -
Cons: It restricts the format of sort command to be the same and is thus less flexible.
-
-
Alternative 2: Use separate commands for each possible field, such as
gpa-sort
,rating-sort
andname-sort
commands-
Pros: It allows developers to specify different command formats. For example, users might not need to specify the sorting order explicitly.
rating-sort
andgpa-sort
can have default sorting order to be descending while results fromname-sort
can be in ascending order. -
Cons: It increases the number of commands in HR+ and might be less user-friendly as users need to familiarise themselves with more commands.
-
The undo/redo mechanism is facilitated by an UndoRedoStack
, which resides inside LogicManager
. It supports undoing and redoing of commands that modifies the state of the address book (e.g. add
, edit
). Such commands will inherit from UndoableCommand
.
UndoRedoStack
only deals with UndoableCommands
. Commands that cannot be undone will inherit from Command
instead. The following diagram shows the inheritance diagram for commands:
As you can see from the diagram, UndoableCommand
adds an extra layer between the abstract Command
class and concrete commands that can be undone, such as the DeleteCommand
. Note that extra tasks need to be done when executing a command in an undoable way, such as saving the state of the address book before execution. UndoableCommand
contains the high-level algorithm for those extra tasks while the child classes implements the details of how to execute the specific command. Note that this technique of putting the high-level algorithm in the parent class and lower-level steps of the algorithm in child classes is also known as the template pattern.
Commands that are not undoable are implemented this way:
public class ListCommand extends Command {
@Override
public CommandResult execute() {
// ... list logic ...
}
}
With the extra layer, the commands that are undoable are implemented this way:
public abstract class UndoableCommand extends Command {
@Override
public CommandResult execute() {
// ... undo logic ...
executeUndoableCommand();
}
}
public class DeleteCommand extends UndoableCommand {
@Override
public CommandResult executeUndoableCommand() {
// ... delete logic ...
}
}
Suppose that the user has just launched the application. The UndoRedoStack
will be empty at the beginning.
The user executes a new UndoableCommand
, delete 5
, to delete the 5th person in the address book. The current state of the address book is saved before the delete 5
command executes. The delete 5
command will then be pushed onto the undoStack
(the current state is saved together with the command).
As the user continues to use the program, more commands are added into the undoStack
. For example, the user may execute add n/David …
to add a new person.
ℹ️
|
If a command fails its execution, it will not be pushed to the UndoRedoStack at all.
|
The user now decides that adding the person was a mistake, and decides to undo that action using undo
.
We will pop the most recent command out of the undoStack
and push it back to the redoStack
. We will restore the address book to the state before the add
command executed.
ℹ️
|
If the undoStack is empty, then there are no other commands left to be undone, and an Exception will be thrown when popping the undoStack .
|
The following sequence diagram shows how the undo operation works:
The redo does the exact opposite (pops from redoStack
, push to undoStack
, and restores the address book to the state after the command is executed).
ℹ️
|
If the redoStack is empty, then there are no other commands left to be redone, and an Exception will be thrown when popping the redoStack .
|
The user now decides to execute a new command, clear
. As before, clear
will be pushed into the undoStack
. This time the redoStack
is no longer empty. It will be purged as it no longer make sense to redo the add n/David
command (this is the behavior that most modern desktop applications follow).
Commands that are not undoable are not added into the undoStack
. For example, list
, which inherits from Command
rather than UndoableCommand
, will not be added after execution:
The following activity diagram summarize what happens inside the UndoRedoStack
when a user executes a new command:
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Add a new abstract method
executeUndoableCommand()
-
Pros: We will not lose any undone/redone functionality as it is now part of the default behaviour. Classes that deal with
Command
do not have to know thatexecuteUndoableCommand()
exist. -
Cons: Hard for new developers to understand the template pattern.
-
-
Alternative 2: Just override
execute()
-
Pros: Does not involve the template pattern, easier for new developers to understand.
-
Cons: Classes that inherit from
UndoableCommand
must remember to callsuper.execute()
, or lose the ability to undo/redo.
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Saves the entire address book.
-
Pros: Easy to implement.
-
Cons: May have performance issues in terms of memory usage.
-
-
Alternative 2: Individual command knows how to undo/redo by itself.
-
Pros: Will use less memory (e.g. for
delete
, just save the person being deleted). -
Cons: We must ensure that the implementation of each individual command are correct.
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Only include commands that modifies the address book (
add
,clear
,edit
).-
Pros: We only revert changes that are hard to change back (the view can easily be re-modified as no data are * lost).
-
Cons: User might think that undo also applies when the list is modified (undoing filtering for example), * only to realize that it does not do that, after executing
undo
.
-
-
Alternative 2: Include all commands.
-
Pros: Might be more intuitive for the user.
-
Cons: User have no way of skipping such commands if he or she just want to reset the state of the address * book and not the view. Additional Info: See our discussion here.
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Use separate stack for undo and redo
-
Pros: Easy to understand for new Computer Science student undergraduates to understand, who are likely to be * the new incoming developers of our project.
-
Cons: Logic is duplicated twice. For example, when a new command is executed, we must remember to update * both
HistoryManager
andUndoRedoStack
.
-
-
Alternative 2: Use
HistoryManager
for undo/redo-
Pros: We do not need to maintain a separate stack, and just reuse what is already in the codebase.
-
Cons: Requires dealing with commands that have already been undone: We must remember to skip these commands. Violates Single Responsibility Principle and Separation of Concerns as
HistoryManager
now needs to do two * different things.
-
The find
command is facilitated by an AllPredicate
class, which composes of predicates that determine the fields that are supported. Each field has its own set of predicates that determine the types of search patterns the user can perform. Search results of the keywords are stored in FindResults
, which is a singleton pattern class.
The following diagram, Figure 3.4.1.1 shows the composition of the AllPredicate
class and the relationship between FindResults
:
Figure 3.4.1.1 Composition of AllPredicate
class
The following code snippet shows an example of one type of predicate:
public boolean test(Person person) {
return keywords.stream()
.anyMatch(keyword -> FindResults.getInstance()
.containsWordIgnoreCase(person.getName().fullName, keyword,
commandPrefix)
|| keywords.stream()
.anyMatch(fuzzyKeyword ->
FindResults.getInstance().containsFuzzyMatchIgnoreCase(
person.getName().fullName, fuzzyKeyword, commandPrefix,
FindCommand.LEVENSHTEIN_DISTANCE_THRESHOLD)));
}
The following sequence diagrams, Figure 3.4.1.2 and Figure 3.4.1.3 shows how the find
command works:
Figure 3.4.1.2 Sequence diagram of find
command (1st part)
Figure 3.4.1.3 Sequence diagram of find
command (2nd part)
The execution of the find command comprises the following steps:
-
LogicManager
invokesparseCommand
method ofAddressbookParser
, taking user inputs as arguments. -
AddressbookParser
calls theparse
method ofFindCommandParser
to parse the arguments and return aFindCommand
object. -
FindCommandParser
calls theparseFindArgs
method ofFindUtil
, which calls either theparseAllPredicates
orparseSelectedPredicates
method fromPredicateUtil
depending on whether the argument starts with a prefix. -
The
FindCommand
object is initialized with a combinedPredicate<Person>
object. -
The
FindCommand
object calls the methodupdateFilteredPersonList
with thePredicate<Person>
object.
The following code snippets show how methods formOrPredicate
and formAndPredicate
are implemented:
public final Predicate<Person> formOrPredicate(Predicate<Person>... predicates) {
return Stream.of(predicates).filter(Objects::nonNull)
.reduce(condition -> false, Predicate::or);
}
public final Predicate<Person> formAndPredicate(Predicate<Person>... predicates) {
return Stream.of(predicates).filter(Objects::nonNull)
.reduce(condition -> true, Predicate::and);
}
The following sequence diagram, Figure 3.4.1.4, shows how the Logic
component retrieves search results from FindResults
without interference from the Model
component:
Figure 3.4.1.4 Component interactions for find
command
ℹ️
|
Note how results are retrieved from FindResults . It is important to have FindResults as a singleton pattern class as there should only be one instance of search results for every search performed by the find command.
|
The following activity diagram, Figure 3.4.1.5 summarizes what happens when an user executes the find
command:
Figure 3.4.1.5 Activity diagram when user executes find
command
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Each field has its own field predicate composing of the predicates corresponding to the search pattern. The
AllPredicate
class is used to manage all these field predicates.-
Pros: It is easy for new developers to understand. New developers can test each predicate easily, resulting in the debugging process to be smoother. They can also add or remove new predicates of each field easily as all predicates all grouped separately. This choice also adheres to Single Responsibility Principle (SRP) and Separation of Concerns (SoC).
-
Cons: It results in a lot of classes to be created. Although there is increased cohesion, there is also increased coupling. Furthermore, this choice also violates Open-Closed Principle (OCP).
-
-
Alternative 2: Merge all predicates into one class
-
Pros: It is easy for new developers to manage this command. This choice also reduces the amount of code written significantly.
-
Cons: It is difficult to test existing and new predicates. This choice decreases cohesion although it decreases coupling.
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Set a private static constant
-
Pros: It does not involve user intervention to set the threshold. It also decreases the chances of an increase in false positives should the user set a high threshold.
-
Cons: It does not allow users to set their desired threshold. Some users might need specific threshold to suit their needs
-
-
Alternative 2: Allow users to set their own threshold
-
Pros: It caters to more users with specific preferences.
-
Cons: It results in more implementation and tests to be written.
-
Filter Command is supported by an FilterCommand
class. It supports the advanced filtering of multiple fields such as ExpectedGraduationYear
. Filter commands can supports both filtering by keyword and filtering by range, if the field has natural ordering.
Filter command currently only filters ExpectedGraduationYear
but will support more fields in the subsequent weeks.
Filter command interact with Model
and UI
in the following way:
-
FilterCommandParser
parses the user inputs into a wholesomePredicate<Person>
. -
This predicate will be used to instantiate the
FilterCommand
-
Upon execution of the filter command, the UI will be updated by imposing the new predicate to the
FilteredList
in theModelManager
class.
Below is the sequence diagram of filter command.
-
Alternative 1 (current choice):
FilterCommandParser
breaks down user input according to prefix and pass to different methods inFilterUtil
to generate respectivePredicate<Person>
, after which it unions thesePredicate
.-
Pros: This appoach breaks down the parsing process into multiple classes and each class is responsible for single duty. This makes debugging easier.
-
Cons: New developers may find it hard to understand the design pattern.
-
-
Alternative 2: Puts actual parsing in
FilterCommandParser
class.-
Pros: It reduces number of classes used and is easier for new developers to understand.
-
Cons: It violates single responsibility principle.
FilterCommandParser
will have too many distinct functionalities such as-
breaking down user input by prefix
-
breaking down user’s predicate for each prefix
-
creating
FilterRange
objects to record down each range specified in the predicate -
creating
Predicate
fromFilterRange
-
unioning these
Predicate
-
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): All user input will either be in form of
ToBeFilteredClassPrefix/singletonValue, lowerRange - higherRange
. Both singleton value and range will be parsed into aFilterRange<ToBeFilteredClass>
.-
Pros: It ensures the user input is valid since
FilterRange<E>
can callE.isValid()
to check. This ensures the integrity ofPredicate
later. -
Cons: New developers may find it hard to understand the design pattern.
-
-
Alternative 2 (current choice): All parsing of singleton or ranged values will be handled by some methods in
FilterUtil
.-
Pros: New developers will find it easier to understand the design pattern.
-
Cons: It will be messy to handle both singletona dn ranged values in one method. It also adds the complexity of
FilterUtil
class.
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Predicates in the same field will be ORed together. Predicates in the different field will be ANDed together.
-
Pros: For the same field, the user can have more flexibility in selecting the desired values. For the different field, the predicates are in logical conjunction to make the filter more restrictive. This follows the natural way of human thinking.
-
Cons: The developers may be confused about the OR/AND rule at first.
-
-
Alternative 2: Everything will be ORed together.
-
Pros: It is an easier logical pattern for developers to understand.
-
Cons: It is user unfriendly. The only way for user to filter the persons who is in Computer Science, graduating in 2020 and has a GPA greater than 4.6 is to use 3 filter commands.
-
The interview
command allows Talent Acquisition Specialists to schedule an interview for candidates. The format of this command is interview INDEX DATE_TIME_EXPRESSION
.
This command make use of Natty, a natural language date parser library written in Java. When given a date expression, it will apply standard language recognition and translation techniques to produce LocalDateTime
which represents the result.
In our current implementation, the interview
command inherits from the UndoableCommand
class. Two components, Logic
and Model
, are involved in the execution of this command. The Logic
component is responsible for parsing user inputs while the Model
component deals with updating of filtered person list.
Below is a sequence diagram that illustrates how these two components interact when the interview
command is executed:
Figure 3.6.1.1 Sequence diagram to illustrate component interactions for the interview
command
As shown above, execution of the interview
command comprises the following steps:
-
LogicManager
invokesparseCommand
method ofAddressbookParser
, taking user inputs as arguments. -
During the
parseCommand
method call, an instance ofInterviewCommandParser
will be created when the keyword "interview" is matched.InterviewCommandParser
then extracts the remaining user inputs and aInterviewCommand
instancei
will be returned provided that the format of user’s input is correct. -
LogicManager
then callsexecuteUndoableCommand
of theInterviewCommand
,i
, instantiated in step 2. Another component,Model
, will be involved as theInterviewCommand
requests to update the interview date of the person. -
The
Model
component gets the filtered persons list and replacesPerson
p1 withPerson
p2 which is identical to p2 except interview date. ACommandResult
will be generated and returned toLogicManager
.
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Use the natural language parser library by Natty to specify date and time
-
Pros: Users are able to enter the date and time in more natural tone without looking at calendar (For example, schedule an interview next Friday at 3pm)
-
Cons: Natural language parser doesn’t have 100% reliability due to the complexity of human language
-
-
Alternative 2: Use the typical DD/MM/YYYY HH:MM format to specify date and time
-
Pros: Users are able to specify the date and time precisely
-
Cons: Users have to be certain on the date and time, which have to refer to the calendar at the same time
-
-
Alternative 1 (current choice): Implement a new command class
InterviewCommand
that supports both scheduling and editing of interview date.-
Pros: Results in more customisable and modular command that can be easily modified
-
Cons: Complicates the system as users need to familiarise themselves with more commands
-
-
Alternative 2: Extend the original
EditCommand
to allow it to schedule and modify interview date of a candidate-
Pros: Minimises the number of commands users have to remember to execute tasks, making the application more user-friendly
-
Cons: Requires substantial changes to
EditCommandParser
and hence harder to implement
-
Our user interface is specially designed to maximise HR+’s usability and improve user experience. We take into account minor details and ensure that data is presented clearly so that it appeals to our users.
The following sections discuss the different aspects we have considered to make sure HR+ follows industry standards in user interface design. Our implementation follows Material Design principles created by a leading technology company Google.
Responsive design is an approach to provide optimal viewing experience of an application regardless of the screen size of the user’s device. To incorporate responsive design into HR+, we use AnchorPane
, a built-in JavaFX container component, to support relative positioning for all four directions (left, right, top and down) between parent and child components.
All UI components have a minimum size requirement. Therefore, every container component in HR+ has a minWidth
property.
Besides AnchorPane
, we also set a listener on the size of InfoPanel
- a panel that displays detailed information about a student in HR+. The following code snippets illustrate how this listener is implemented:
// SPLIT_MIN_WIDTH is a constant to define when to trigger the merge
infoPaneWrapper.widthProperty().addListener((obs, old, newValue) -> {
int width = newValue.intValue();
if (width >= SPLIT_MIN_WIDTH) {
// Split into two parts
} else {
// Merge into one part
}
});
When a user runs HR+ on a device with a bigger screen size, the InfoPanel
will be split into two parts. The left panel will display student’s information while the right panel shows the student’s rating scores and a View resume button. The figure below (Figure 3.7.1.1) shows an example of our interface on devices with larger screens:
Figure 3.7.1.1 InfoPanel on devices with larger screens
On the other hand, if the device has a smaller screen size, the two components of InfoPanel
will collapse into one. The student’s information is on top of the student’s ratings. ScrollPane
in InfoPanel
allows the user to scroll through the single merged panel. The figure below (Figure 3.7.1.2) shows our sample interface on devices with smaller screens:
Figure 3.7.1.2 InfoPanel on devices with smaller screens
Consistency is another principle that is important in life and in design. Not only it brings up the professional feel and look, users will feel that the app is more reliable and robust. Besides that, it is easier for users to get started as the app follows a consistent pattern.
In order to follow this principle, we have used consistent color, layout and also fonts throughout the whole app. It will be discussed the in details below:
The primary color in HR+ is blue, with 10 shades of blue in the figure illustrated below (Figure 3.7.2.1). Other than the primary color, different shades of grey are also being used to show the level of significance of an information. Besides that, the colors that are being used are harmonized such that it brings up an unified feeling while users are using the app.
Figure 3.7.2.1 10 shades of blue used in HR+
The spacing and layout inside HR+ is consistent and balanced. We make good use of spacing to achieve grouping of elements so that legibility is improved. This allow users to have a sense of which information are relevant to each other.
For example, it is easy to separate between the applicant’s information, contact information and interview information at a glance without the need of boxes. Examples are shown in the figure below (Figure 3.7.2.2)
Figure 3.7.2.2 Grouping with spacing
The font family that is being used is Roboto. It follows a natural width that allows text to be read more fluently. Moreover, this font featured 6 different weights (thin, light, regular, medium, bold and black) which will allow text to be represented depending on the different level of importance. All different weights are shown in the figure below. (Figure 3.7.2.3)
Figure 3.7.2.3 Different weights of Roboto font
Important information is usually shown with a higher weight whereas trivial information is shown with a lower weight. This allow users to skim through the information to process data easily. The fonts are stored in resources/fonts
folder and embedded into the packaged app so that it can be loaded on all devices.
Familiarity is another aspect that is useful when designing an app. It can reduce the cognitive load of a user so that users will not feel overwhelmed by the information that is being displayed.
In HR+, icons are used to represent some of the fields. For example, stars are used to represent average rating of an applicant in the PersonCard list on the left (Figure 3.7.3.1, pointed with red arrow).
Figure 3.7.3.1 Rating icon in PersonCard
Besides that, contact information fields such as e-mail, address and mobile phone number uses a familiar icon. (Figure 3.7.3.2)
Figure 3.7.3.2 Contact information icons in InfoPanel
Visual Feedback is also essential for users to identify the current state of the app. This is because user might get interrupted while using the app and have to resume the session at any time.
In HR+, when an applicant is selected in the PersonCard list on the left panel, it will be highlighted in blue border and shadow so that users know who they are currently selecting. (Figure 3.7.4.1)
Figure 3.7.4.1 Highlighting of selected PersonCard
Besides that, there is an indication when a panel is selected. This allows users to traverse between panel using keyboard only. (Figure 3.7.4.2)
Figure 3.7.4.2 Highlighting of selected Panel
Moreover, when a command entered in CommandBox
is invalid, the text color will be changed into red to indicate that there is an error in the command itself. (Figure 3.7.4.3)
Figure 3.7.4.3 Invalid command indicator
We are using java.util.logging
package for logging. The LogsCenter
class is used to manage the logging levels and logging destinations.
-
The logging level can be controlled using the
logLevel
setting in the configuration file (See Section 3.10, “Configuration”) -
The
Logger
for a class can be obtained usingLogsCenter.getLogger(Class)
which will log messages according to the specified logging level -
Currently log messages are output through:
Console
and to a.log
file.
Logging Levels
-
SEVERE
: Critical problem detected which may possibly cause the termination of the application -
WARNING
: Can continue, but with caution -
INFO
: Information showing the noteworthy actions by the App -
FINE
: Details that is not usually noteworthy but may be useful in debugging e.g. print the actual list instead of just its size
We use asciidoc for writing documentation.
ℹ️
|
We chose asciidoc over Markdown because asciidoc, although a bit more complex than Markdown, provides more flexibility in formatting. |
See UsingGradle.adoc to learn how to render .adoc
files locally to preview the end result of your edits.
Alternatively, you can download the AsciiDoc plugin for IntelliJ, which allows you to preview the changes you have made to your .adoc
files in real-time.
See UsingTravis.adoc to learn how to deploy GitHub Pages using Travis.
We use Google Chrome for converting documentation to PDF format, as Chrome’s PDF engine preserves hyperlinks used in webpages.
Here are the steps to convert the project documentation files to PDF format.
-
Follow the instructions in UsingGradle.adoc to convert the AsciiDoc files in the
docs/
directory to HTML format. -
Go to your generated HTML files in the
build/docs
folder, right click on them and selectOpen with
→Google Chrome
. -
Within Chrome, click on the
Print
option in Chrome’s menu. -
Set the destination to
Save as PDF
, then clickSave
to save a copy of the file in PDF format. For best results, use the settings indicated in the screenshot below.
There are three ways to run tests.
💡
|
The most reliable way to run tests is the 3rd one. The first two methods might fail some GUI tests due to platform/resolution-specific idiosyncrasies. |
Method 1: Using IntelliJ JUnit test runner
-
To run all tests, right-click on the
src/test/java
folder and chooseRun 'All Tests'
-
To run a subset of tests, you can right-click on a test package, test class, or a test and choose
Run 'ABC'
Method 2: Using Gradle
-
Open a console and run the command
gradlew clean allTests
(Mac/Linux:./gradlew clean allTests
)
ℹ️
|
See UsingGradle.adoc for more info on how to run tests using Gradle. |
Method 3: Using Gradle (headless)
Thanks to the TestFX library we use, our GUI tests can be run in the headless mode. In the headless mode, GUI tests do not show up on the screen. That means the developer can do other things on the Computer while the tests are running.
To run tests in headless mode, open a console and run the command gradlew clean headless allTests
(Mac/Linux: ./gradlew clean headless allTests
)
We have two types of tests:
-
GUI Tests - These are tests involving the GUI. They include,
-
System Tests that test the entire App by simulating user actions on the GUI. These are in the
systemtests
package. -
Unit tests that test the individual components. These are in
seedu.address.ui
package.
-
-
Non-GUI Tests - These are tests not involving the GUI. They include,
-
Unit tests targeting the lowest level methods/classes.
e.g.seedu.address.commons.StringUtilTest
-
Integration tests that are checking the integration of multiple code units (those code units are assumed to be working).
e.g.seedu.address.storage.StorageManagerTest
-
Hybrids of unit and integration tests. These test are checking multiple code units as well as how the are connected together.
e.g.seedu.address.logic.LogicManagerTest
-
See UsingGradle.adoc to learn how to use Gradle for build automation.
We use Travis CI and AppVeyor to perform Continuous Integration on our projects. See UsingTravis.adoc and UsingAppVeyor.adoc for more details.
We use Coveralls to track the code coverage of our projects. See UsingCoveralls.adoc for more details.
When a pull request has changes to asciidoc files, you can use Netlify to see a preview of how the HTML version of those asciidoc files will look like when the pull request is merged. See UsingNetlify.adoc for more details.
Here are the steps to create a new release.
-
Update the version number in
MainApp.java
. -
Generate a JAR file using Gradle.
-
Tag the repo with the version number. e.g.
v0.1
-
Create a new release using GitHub and upload the JAR file you created.
A project often depends on third-party libraries. For example, Address Book depends on the Jackson library for XML parsing. Managing these dependencies can be automated using Gradle. For example, Gradle can download the dependencies automatically, which is better than these alternatives.
a. Include those libraries in the repo (this bloats the repo size)
b. Require developers to download those libraries manually (this creates extra work for developers)
Suggested path for new programmers:
-
First, add small local-impact (i.e. the impact of the change does not go beyond the component) enhancements to one component at a time. Some suggestions are given in Section A.1, “Improving each component”.
-
Next, add a feature that touches multiple components to learn how to implement an end-to-end feature across all components. Section A.2, “Creating a new command:
remark
” explains how to go about adding such a feature.
Each individual exercise in this section is component-based (i.e. you would not need to modify the other components to get it to work).
Scenario: You are in charge of logic
. During dog-fooding, your team realize that it is troublesome for the user to type the whole command in order to execute a command. Your team devise some strategies to help cut down the amount of typing necessary, and one of the suggestions was to implement aliases for the command words. Your job is to implement such aliases.
💡
|
Do take a look at Section 2.3, “Logic component” before attempting to modify the Logic component.
|
-
Add a shorthand equivalent alias for each of the individual commands. For example, besides typing
clear
, the user can also typec
to remove all persons in the list.-
Hints
-
Just like we store each individual command word constant
COMMAND_WORD
inside*Command.java
(e.g.FindCommand#COMMAND_WORD
,DeleteCommand#COMMAND_WORD
), you need a new constant for aliases as well (e.g.FindCommand#COMMAND_ALIAS
). -
AddressBookParser
is responsible for analyzing command words.
-
-
Solution
-
Modify the switch statement in
AddressBookParser#parseCommand(String)
such that both the proper command word and alias can be used to execute the same intended command. -
Add new tests for each of the aliases that you have added.
-
Update the user guide to document the new aliases.
-
See this PR for the full solution.
-
-
Scenario: You are in charge of model
. One day, the logic
-in-charge approaches you for help. He wants to implement a command such that the user is able to remove a particular tag from everyone in the address book, but the model API does not support such a functionality at the moment. Your job is to implement an API method, so that your teammate can use your API to implement his command.
💡
|
Do take a look at Section 2.4, “Model component” before attempting to modify the Model component.
|
-
Add a
removeTag(Tag)
method. The specified tag will be removed from everyone in the address book.-
Hints
-
The
Model
and theAddressBook
API need to be updated. -
Think about how you can use SLAP to design the method. Where should we place the main logic of deleting tags?
-
Find out which of the existing API methods in
AddressBook
andPerson
classes can be used to implement the tag removal logic.AddressBook
allows you to update a person, andPerson
allows you to update the tags.
-
-
Solution
-
Implement a
removeTag(Tag)
method inAddressBook
. Loop through each person, and remove thetag
from each person. -
Add a new API method
deleteTag(Tag)
inModelManager
. YourModelManager
should callAddressBook#removeTag(Tag)
. -
Add new tests for each of the new public methods that you have added.
-
See this PR for the full solution.
-
The current codebase has a flaw in tags management. Tags no longer in use by anyone may still exist on the
AddressBook
. This may cause some tests to fail. See issue#753
for more information about this flaw. -
The solution PR has a temporary fix for the flaw mentioned above in its first commit.
-
-
-
Scenario: You are in charge of ui
. During a beta testing session, your team is observing how the users use your address book application. You realize that one of the users occasionally tries to delete non-existent tags from a contact, because the tags all look the same visually, and the user got confused. Another user made a typing mistake in his command, but did not realize he had done so because the error message wasn’t prominent enough. A third user keeps scrolling down the list, because he keeps forgetting the index of the last person in the list. Your job is to implement improvements to the UI to solve all these problems.
💡
|
Do take a look at Section 2.2, “UI component” before attempting to modify the UI component.
|
-
Use different colors for different tags inside person cards. For example,
friends
tags can be all in brown, andcolleagues
tags can be all in yellow.Before
After
-
Hints
-
The tag labels are created inside the
PersonCard
constructor (new Label(tag.tagName)
). JavaFX’sLabel
class allows you to modify the style of each Label, such as changing its color. -
Use the .css attribute
-fx-background-color
to add a color. -
You may wish to modify
DarkTheme.css
to include some pre-defined colors using css, especially if you have experience with web-based css.
-
-
Solution
-
You can modify the existing test methods for
PersonCard
's to include testing the tag’s color as well. -
See this PR for the full solution.
-
The PR uses the hash code of the tag names to generate a color. This is deliberately designed to ensure consistent colors each time the application runs. You may wish to expand on this design to include additional features, such as allowing users to set their own tag colors, and directly saving the colors to storage, so that tags retain their colors even if the hash code algorithm changes.
-
-
-
-
Modify
NewResultAvailableEvent
such thatResultDisplay
can show a different style on error (currently it shows the same regardless of errors).Before
After
-
Hints
-
NewResultAvailableEvent
is raised byCommandBox
which also knows whether the result is a success or failure, and is caught byResultDisplay
which is where we want to change the style to. -
Refer to
CommandBox
for an example on how to display an error.
-
-
Solution
-
Modify
NewResultAvailableEvent
's constructor so that users of the event can indicate whether an error has occurred. -
Modify
ResultDisplay#handleNewResultAvailableEvent(NewResultAvailableEvent)
to react to this event appropriately. -
You can write two different kinds of tests to ensure that the functionality works:
-
The unit tests for
ResultDisplay
can be modified to include verification of the color. -
The system tests
AddressBookSystemTest#assertCommandBoxShowsDefaultStyle() and AddressBookSystemTest#assertCommandBoxShowsErrorStyle()
to include verification forResultDisplay
as well.
-
-
See this PR for the full solution.
-
Do read the commits one at a time if you feel overwhelmed.
-
-
-
-
Modify the
StatusBarFooter
to show the total number of people in the address book.Before
After
-
Hints
-
StatusBarFooter.fxml
will need a newStatusBar
. Be sure to set theGridPane.columnIndex
properly for eachStatusBar
to avoid misalignment! -
StatusBarFooter
needs to initialize the status bar on application start, and to update it accordingly whenever the address book is updated.
-
-
Solution
-
Modify the constructor of
StatusBarFooter
to take in the number of persons when the application just started. -
Use
StatusBarFooter#handleAddressBookChangedEvent(AddressBookChangedEvent)
to update the number of persons whenever there are new changes to the addressbook. -
For tests, modify
StatusBarFooterHandle
by adding a state-saving functionality for the total number of people status, just like what we did for save location and sync status. -
For system tests, modify
AddressBookSystemTest
to also verify the new total number of persons status bar. -
See this PR for the full solution.
-
-
Scenario: You are in charge of storage
. For your next project milestone, your team plans to implement a new feature of saving the address book to the cloud. However, the current implementation of the application constantly saves the address book after the execution of each command, which is not ideal if the user is working on limited internet connection. Your team decided that the application should instead save the changes to a temporary local backup file first, and only upload to the cloud after the user closes the application. Your job is to implement a backup API for the address book storage.
💡
|
Do take a look at Section 2.5, “Storage component” before attempting to modify the Storage component.
|
-
Add a new method
backupAddressBook(ReadOnlyAddressBook)
, so that the address book can be saved in a fixed temporary location.-
Hint
-
Add the API method in
AddressBookStorage
interface. -
Implement the logic in
StorageManager
andXmlAddressBookStorage
class.
-
-
Solution
-
See this PR for the full solution.
-
-
By creating this command, you will get a chance to learn how to implement a feature end-to-end, touching all major components of the app.
Scenario: You are a software maintainer for addressbook
, as the former developer team has moved on to new projects. The current users of your application have a list of new feature requests that they hope the software will eventually have. The most popular request is to allow adding additional comments/notes about a particular contact, by providing a flexible remark
field for each contact, rather than relying on tags alone. After designing the specification for the remark
command, you are convinced that this feature is worth implementing. Your job is to implement the remark
command.
Edits the remark for a person specified in the INDEX
.
Format: remark INDEX r/[REMARK]
Examples:
-
remark 1 r/Likes to drink coffee.
Edits the remark for the first person toLikes to drink coffee.
-
remark 1 r/
Removes the remark for the first person.
Let’s start by teaching the application how to parse a remark
command. We will add the logic of remark
later.
Main:
-
Add a
RemarkCommand
that extendsUndoableCommand
. Upon execution, it should just throw anException
. -
Modify
AddressBookParser
to accept aRemarkCommand
.
Tests:
-
Add
RemarkCommandTest
that tests thatexecuteUndoableCommand()
throws an Exception. -
Add new test method to
AddressBookParserTest
, which tests that typing "remark" returns an instance ofRemarkCommand
.
Let’s teach the application to parse arguments that our remark
command will accept. E.g. 1 r/Likes to drink coffee.
Main:
-
Modify
RemarkCommand
to take in anIndex
andString
and print those two parameters as the error message. -
Add
RemarkCommandParser
that knows how to parse two arguments, one index and one with prefix 'r/'. -
Modify
AddressBookParser
to use the newly implementedRemarkCommandParser
.
Tests:
-
Modify
RemarkCommandTest
to test theRemarkCommand#equals()
method. -
Add
RemarkCommandParserTest
that tests different boundary values forRemarkCommandParser
. -
Modify
AddressBookParserTest
to test that the correct command is generated according to the user input.
Let’s add a placeholder on all our PersonCard
s to display a remark for each person later.
Main:
-
Add a
Label
with any random text insidePersonListCard.fxml
. -
Add FXML annotation in
PersonCard
to tie the variable to the actual label.
Tests:
-
Modify
PersonCardHandle
so that future tests can read the contents of the remark label.
We have to properly encapsulate the remark in our Person
class. Instead of just using a String
, let’s follow the conventional class structure that the codebase already uses by adding a Remark
class.
Main:
-
Add
Remark
to model component (you can copy fromAddress
, remove the regex and change the names accordingly). -
Modify
RemarkCommand
to now take in aRemark
instead of aString
.
Tests:
-
Add test for
Remark
, to test theRemark#equals()
method.
Now we have the Remark
class, we need to actually use it inside Person
.
Main:
-
Add
getRemark()
inPerson
. -
You may assume that the user will not be able to use the
add
andedit
commands to modify the remarks field (i.e. the person will be created without a remark). -
Modify
SampleDataUtil
to add remarks for the sample data (delete youraddressBook.xml
so that the application will load the sample data when you launch it.)
We now have Remark
s for Person
s, but they will be gone when we exit the application. Let’s modify XmlAdaptedPerson
to include a Remark
field so that it will be saved.
Main:
-
Add a new Xml field for
Remark
.
Tests:
-
Fix
invalidAndValidPersonAddressBook.xml
,typicalPersonsAddressBook.xml
,validAddressBook.xml
etc., such that the XML tests will not fail due to a missing<remark>
element.
Since Person
can now have a Remark
, we should add a helper method to PersonBuilder
, so that users are able to create remarks when building a Person
.
Tests:
-
Add a new method
withRemark()
forPersonBuilder
. This method will create a newRemark
for the person that it is currently building. -
Try and use the method on any sample
Person
inTypicalPersons
.
Our remark label in PersonCard
is still a placeholder. Let’s bring it to life by binding it with the actual remark
field.
Main:
-
Modify
PersonCard
's constructor to bind theRemark
field to thePerson
's remark.
Tests:
-
Modify
GuiTestAssert#assertCardDisplaysPerson(…)
so that it will compare the now-functioning remark label.
We now have everything set up… but we still can’t modify the remarks. Let’s finish it up by adding in actual logic for our remark
command.
Main:
-
Replace the logic in
RemarkCommand#execute()
(that currently just throws anException
), with the actual logic to modify the remarks of a person.
Tests:
-
Update
RemarkCommandTest
to test that theexecute()
logic works.
See this PR for the step-by-step solution.
Target user profile:
-
campus recruiters that have a need to manage a significant number of student contacts
-
prefer desktop apps over other types
-
can type fast
-
prefers typing over mouse input
-
is reasonably comfortable using CLI apps
-
need to keep track of interviews scheduled
-
want to evaluate students' performance after interviews to decide who to hire
Value proposition: offers an open source solution to the recruiting process, enables campus recruiters to find the best-fitting candidates easily and allows them to manage student contacts faster than a typical mouse/GUI driven app.
Feature contribution:
-
Ang Yee Chin
-
Major Feature: UI Scheme
-
Revamps the interface to make it more intuitive and clean
-
Makes the design responsive so that the application page looks good on devices with any screen size
-
Integrates a PDF viewer to display applicants' resumes
-
Adds a calendar that displays scheduled interviews
-
-
Minor Features:
-
Adds a
comments
field that allows recruiters to provide additional information -
Creates radar graphs to help visualise applicants' performance in interviews
-
Adds a
profile picture
field for applicants
-
-
-
Ke Xiaowen
-
Major Feature: Rating
-
Rates an applicant based on technical, communication, problem solving skills and experience after an interview
-
Allows editing of rating scores
-
Supports deletion of ratings
-
Displays overall ratings for rated applicants
-
Offers keyboard shortcuts to auto-fill prefixes
-
-
Minor Features:
-
Adds a
job applied
field for applicants -
Adds a
university
field for applicants
-
-
-
Ma Hongqiang
-
Major Feature: Filter
-
Supports filtering based on the current view of listed persons
-
Allows users to filter fields whose values are either finite or have natural ordering
-
Supports filtering multiple fields at the same time
-
-
Minor Features:
-
Adds a
expected graduation year
field for applicants -
Adds a
resume
field for applicants
-
-
-
Tan Heng Yeow
-
Major Feature: Find
-
Allows users to find all fields that match the exact keyword input
-
Supports finding all fields that contains the keyword input
-
Supports finding all fields that start with the keyword input
-
Supports finding all fields that end with the keyword input
-
Adds a fuzzy find function that enables users to find all fields that are a fuzzy match of the keyword input
-
-
Minor Features:
-
Adds a
major
field for applicants -
Adds a
cGPA
field for applicants
-
-
Priorities: High (must have) - * * *
, Medium (nice to have) - * *
, Low (unlikely to have) - *
Priority | As a … | I want to … | So that I can… |
---|---|---|---|
|
new user |
see usage instructions |
refer to instructions when I forget how to use the App |
|
user |
add a new student |
manage details of students, schedule interviews and track job offers. |
|
user |
delete a student |
remove entries that I no longer need |
|
user |
find a student by name |
locate details of students without having to go through the entire list |
|
user |
find a student by some characters |
locate details of students without having to remember his/her full name |
|
user |
filter a student by fields |
locate details of students in a more optimized view |
|
user |
add profile photo of a student |
recognize the student easily |
|
user |
add a student’s expected graduation date |
gauge how far along the student is in his/her degree |
|
user |
add a student’s interview date |
keep track of interviews scheduled |
|
user |
add a student’s resume |
view the competency of the student |
|
user |
edit a student’s status |
indicate whether students are still being considered or rejected |
|
user |
add a remark |
update additional information about the student |
|
user |
add a rating |
evaluate the performance of the student after an interview |
|
user |
sort students according to their interview performance |
decide on the best-fitting students |
|
user |
add tags for students |
categorise the students better |
|
user |
delete students with a particular tag |
remove groups of student contacts that I no longer need |
|
user |
undo my previous command |
Restore the data to its previous state before the command was executed |
|
user |
redo the previously undone command |
Reverse the most recent undo command |
|
user |
view all interviews scheduled in a calendar |
have a overview of all interviews arranged |
|
user |
send mass emails to successful/unsuccessful candidates |
make recruitment easier |
|
user |
have syntax highlight for my commands |
check my command easily and spot errors faster |
|
user |
change colour scheme of the interface |
customise it according to my preferences |
|
user who values efficiency |
see a list of suggested commands when I key in the command |
select the command I want without having to type out the entire command |
|
user |
hide private contact details by default |
minimize chance of someone else seeing them by accident |
|
user |
visualise a student’s performance using a radar graph |
easily understand his/her performance |
|
user with many persons in the address book |
sort persons by name |
locate a person easily |
|
careless user |
auto-correct typos in my command |
save time checking the command manually |
|
cautious user |
encrypt student’s data stored |
ensure sensitive information will not leak out |
|
user |
send and receive emails within the application |
save time switching between different applications |
(For all use cases below, the System is the AddressBook
and the Actor is the user
, unless specified otherwise)
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to delete a specific person in the list
-
AddressBook deletes the person
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
MSS
-
User requests to add a new person in the list
-
AddressBook adds the new person into the address book.
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
1a. The command is invalid
Use case ends.
MSS
-
User enters the command with the keyword as the name
-
AddressBook shows the list of persons with the keyword
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
1a. The keyword is not found in the list of persons
Use case ends.
MSS
-
User enters the command with the some letters as the name
-
AddressBook shows the list of persons with fields containing the letters
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
1a. There is no such letter found in the list of persons.
Use case ends.
MSS
-
User requests to filter a list of persons that matches the filter
-
AddressBook shows the list of persons that matches the filter
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
1a. The filter condition is invalid
Use case ends.
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to add a resume to the person in the list
-
AddressBook adds a resume to the person
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to add a profile picture to a specific person in the list
-
AddressBook adds a profile picture to the person in the list
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
-
3b. The given path to the image is invalid.
-
3b1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to add a rating to the specific person in the list
-
AddressBook adds a rating to the person
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to add a remark to the person in the list
-
AddressBook adds a remark to the person
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
MSS
-
User requests to list persons
-
AddressBook shows a list of persons
-
User requests to add an interview date to the person in the list
-
AddressBook adds an interview date to the person
Use case ends.
Extensions
-
2a. The list is empty.
Use case ends.
-
3a. The given index is invalid.
-
3a1. AddressBook shows an error message.
Use case resumes at step 2.
-
-
Should work on any mainstream OS as long as it has Java
1.8.0_60
or higher installed. -
Should be able to hold up to 1000 persons without a noticeable sluggishness in performance for typical usage.
-
A user with above average typing speed for regular English text (i.e. not code, not system admin commands) should be able to accomplish most of the tasks faster using commands than using the mouse.
-
Should follow Java coding standards/styles.
-
Should work on both 32-bit and 64-bit environments.
-
Should work without access to the internet.
-
Should work without external software.
- Mainstream OS
-
Windows, Linux, Unix, OS-X
- Private contact detail
-
A contact detail that is not meant to be shared with others
- Rating
-
A score given to a student by interviewers based on areas such as technical competency, leadership quality, communication skills and ability to work well in a team
- Status
-
Indicates a student’s current state within the hiring process - new, in-review, interview, offered, rejected or withdrawn
- Fields
-
Refer to the student’s attributes, including name, phone, address, email, expected graduation year, GPA, interview date, university, major, position applied, profile photo, salutation, status, rating and remark. Some of these fields are mandatory while optional fields can be updated later.
Given below are instructions to test the app manually.
ℹ️
|
These instructions only provide a starting point for testers to work on; testers are expected to do more exploratory testing. |
-
Initial launch
-
Download the jar file and copy into an empty folder
-
Double-click the jar file
Expected: Shows the GUI with a set of sample contacts. The window size may not be optimum.
-
-
Saving window preferences
-
Resize the window to an optimum size. Move the window to a different location. Close the window.
-
Re-launch the app by double-clicking the jar file.
Expected: The most recent window size and location is retained.
-
-
Adding a student into HR+
-
Prerequisites: No student contact in HR+ has the same name, phone number, email, address, university, expected graduation year, major and grade point average as the student contacts to be added.
-
Command:
add n/Damith p/98765432 e/[email protected] a/311, Clementi Ave 2, #02-25 u/NUS y/2018 m/Computer Science g/2.74 j/Software Developer c/Extraordinary Regex skill
Expected: A student named Damith with the above particulars will be added into HR+. The student will be shown in the persons list panel. -
Add a resume pdf file named resume.pdf to the same folder as the jar file. It also must be valid PDF and smaller than 1MB.
Add an image named image.jpg to the same folder as the jar file. It also must be valid image file and smaller than 1MB.
Command:add n/Irene Bae p/83627133 e/[email protected] a/341, Woodlands Drive 20, #22-15 u/SNU y/2020 m/Computer Engineering g/4.87 j/Software Tester r/resume.pdf i/image.jpg
Expected: A student named Irene is added with the above particulars. A resume and a profile image will be added.
-
-
Showing either student info or resume in the right panel
-
Prerequisites: A student is selected using the
select
command. The student selected has a resume added into HR+. -
Command:
show resume
Expected: The resume of the student is displayed when it is available. Command:show info
Expected: The information of the student is displayed in the right panel.
-
Scheduling an interview for a student
-
Command:
interview 1 next Friday at 3pm
Expected: The interview date of the 1st person will be scheduled on next Friday at 3pm. -
Command:
interview 2 Mar 14 2pm
Expected: The interview of the 2nd person will be scheduled on 14 March at 2pm.
-
Adding rating scores to a student without ratings
-
Prerequisites: Student at index 2 must not have ratings yet.
-
Command:
rate 2 t/3.45 c/4.5 p/3.25 e/4
select 2
Expected: Ratings of the second person updated to the above scores. Overall rating is updated to 3.8.
-
-
Editing rating scores assigned to a student whom you have already rated
-
Prerequisites: Student at index 2 must have rating scores assigned already.
-
Command:
rating-edit 2 t/4.2
select 2
Expected: Technical skills score of the second student is updated to 4.2.
-
-
Deleting rating scores assigned to a student whom you have already rated
-
Prerequisites: Student at index 2 must have rating scores assigned already.
-
Command:
rating-delete 2
Expected: Rating scores of the second student is cleared.
-
-
Sorting the list of students in the left panel according to some order
-
Command:
sort rating o/desc
Expected: List of students in the left panel are arranged based on their overall rating in descending order. -
Command:
sort name o/asc
Expected: List of students in the left panel are listed in alphabetical order with cases ignored.
-
-
Updating the status of a student from the list of status
-
Command:
status 1 2
Expected: Student at index 2 has its status changed to 1st round interview.
-
-
Filtering the list of students according to multiple fields
-
Command:
filter y/2019 r/3.5-4.5
Expected: The student list now only contains students with 2019 as their expected graduation year and with overall rating score between 3.5 to 4.5, inclusive.
-
-
Finding the list of students with any fields that match the search keyword according to the search support stated in the User Guide.
-
Command
find bernice, charlot
Expected: The student list now displays studentsBernice Yu
andCharlotte Oliveiro
with reference to the sample data provided.
-
-
Finding the list of students with chosen fields that match the search keyword according to the search support stated in the User Guide.
-
Command
find e/[email protected], [email protected] j/Software p/87438807
Expected: The student list now displays studentAlex Yeoh
with reference to the sample data provided.
-