Quiz app
These quizzes are the pre- and post-lecture quizzes for the data science curriculum at https://aka.ms/webdev-beginners ## Adding a translated quiz set Add a quiz translation by creating matching quiz structures in the assets/translations folders. The canonical quizzes are in assets/translations/en. The quizzes are broken into several groupings. Make sure to align the numbering with the proper quiz section. There are 40 quizzes total in this curriculum, with the count starting at 0. Here's the shape of a translation file: After editing the translations, edit the index.js file in the translation folder to import all the files following the conventions in en. Edit the index.js file in assets/translations to import the new translated files. For example, if your translation JSON is in ex.json, make 'ex' the localization key, then enter it as shown below to import it index.js ## Run the Quiz App locally ### Prerequisites - A GitHub account - Node.js and Git ### Install & Setup 1. Create a repository from this template 1. Clone your new repository, and navigate to the quiz-app bash git clone https://github.com/your-github-organization/repo-name cd repo-name/quiz-app 1. Install the npm packages & dependencies bash npm install ### Build the app 1. To build the solution, run: bash npm run build ### Start the App 1. To run the solution, run: bash npm run dev ### [Optional] Linting 1. To ensure the code is linted, run: bash npm run lint ## Deploy the Quiz-app to Azure ### Prerequisites - An Azure Subscription. Sign up for one for free here. Cost Estimate to deploy this quiz-app: FREE Once you are signed in on Azure through the link above, select a subscription and resource group then: - Static Web App details: Provide a name and select a hosting plan - GitHub Login: Set your deployment source as GitHub then log in and fill in the required fields on the form: - Organization – Choose your organization. - Repository – Select the Web Dev for Beginners curriculum repository. - Branch - Select a branch (main) - Build Presets: Azure Static Web Apps uses a detection algorithm to detect the framework used in your application. - App location - ./quiz-app - Api location - - Output location - dist - Deployment: Click 'Review + Create', then 'Create' Once deployed, a workflow file will be created in the .github directory of your repo. This workflow file contains instructions of events that will trigger a re-deployment of the app to Azure, for example, a push on branch main etc. Example Workflow File Here’s an example of what the GitHub Actions workflow file might look like: name: Azure Static Web Apps CI/CD on: push: branches: - main pull_request: types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, closed] branches: - main jobs: build_and_deploy_job: runs-on: ubuntu-latest name: Build and Deploy Job steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - name: Build And Deploy id: builddeploy uses: Azure/static-web-apps-deploy@v1 with: azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }} repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} action: "upload" app_location: "quiz-app" # App source code path api_location: ""API source code path optional output_location: "dist" #Built app content directory - optional - Post-Deployment: After deployment is complete, click on 'Go to Deployment' then 'View app in browser'. Once your GitHub Action (workflow) is executed successfully, refresh the live page to view your application.
[ { "title": "A title", "complete": "A complete button title", "error": "An error message upon selecting the wrong answer", "quizzes": [ { "id": 1, "title": "Title", "quiz": [ { "questionText": "The question asked", "answerOptions": [ { "answerText": "Option 1 title", "isCorrect": true }, { "answerText": "Option 2 title", "isCorrect": false } ] } ] } ] } ]
Follow the lesson from Microsoft Web-Dev-For-Beginners course