Angular, Unit Testing, and Figma
Angular, Unit Testing, and Figma, available at $29.99, has an average rating of 3.83, with 32 lectures, based on 6 reviews, and has 5019 subscribers.
You will learn about Using Figma as a supporter to Angular, CSS code generator Basic unit testing in Angular apps Building a basic app in Angular Angular Material This course is ideal for individuals who are Programmers wanting to learn Angular, for building frontend or Researchers waiting to build apps for their scientific computation or Angular programmers wanting to learn Figma or Angular programmers new to unit testing It is particularly useful for Programmers wanting to learn Angular, for building frontend or Researchers waiting to build apps for their scientific computation or Angular programmers wanting to learn Figma or Angular programmers new to unit testing.
Enroll now: Angular, Unit Testing, and Figma
Summary
Title: Angular, Unit Testing, and Figma
Price: $29.99
Average Rating: 3.83
Number of Lectures: 32
Number of Published Lectures: 32
Number of Curriculum Items: 34
Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 34
Original Price: R$79.90
Quality Status: approved
Status: Live
What You Will Learn
- Using Figma as a supporter to Angular, CSS code generator
- Basic unit testing in Angular apps
- Building a basic app in Angular
- Angular Material
Who Should Attend
- Programmers wanting to learn Angular, for building frontend
- Researchers waiting to build apps for their scientific computation
- Angular programmers wanting to learn Figma
- Angular programmers new to unit testing
Target Audiences
- Programmers wanting to learn Angular, for building frontend
- Researchers waiting to build apps for their scientific computation
- Angular programmers wanting to learn Figma
- Angular programmers new to unit testing
“Every web developer relies heavily on one web framework or another
(sometimes more if their services have different requirements) and
companies will rely on many frameworks, but each has its own pros and
cons.” Jay Bell, Greg Magolan, David Guijarro, Adrien de Peretti, Patrick Housley talking about NestJS
You may want to see the article “Computer programmers behave like drug addicted” Jorge Guerra Pires, PhD Published in Geek Culture, regarding bad reviews here.
==
Angular is a Google framework: it is a Single Application Page (SPA) generator.
With Angular, you can build apps that runs on browsers (frontend), no need of backend frameworks/libraries such as Express/Node.js/NestJS. With current achievements by the Angular community, you can now do essentially anything on the frontend. Recently, Firebase, also from Google, was integrated into Angular: Firebase provides several nice features, e.g., machine learning and Google based login.
Some strong points of Angular:
1. Was designed to be tested (i.e., ideal for unit testing-based apps; e.g., Test Driven Development), the Angular creators created standard tests, and constantly release new ways of easily testing apps using their libraries. With Jasmine/Karma, you can do essentially all kinds of unit tests;
2. It goes well with other technologies also from Google, see my articles on Medium “Firebase and Angular: connect your frontend app to a noSQL database” and “Meet my project “TensorFlow.js in Angular”: working on Angular based machine learning apps“;
See my article on Medium “Does Angular really suck: why I have to disagree!“.
This is a several volumes course. On this volume, you shall learn how to build a simple dashboard, to be continued in future volumes: we are going to cover the logged-out user version. The full app is already available on GitHub, under MIT license. As a result, this course can be followed by anyone wanting to learn Angular.
This volume is quite generic, and can be followed by anyone wanting to learn Angular focused on unit testing with Jasmine/Karma.
We are going to build a page on this volume, with a footer and header, with a background. The header has an Angular Material menu. We used Figma to draw the page before it was built, and borrowed CSS codes from the Figma project.
Even though the app we built here is simple, we cover several topics:
1. Unit testing Angular components;
2. Creating Angular components;
3. Using Angular Material;
4. Using Figma alongside Angular, not just as a visual aid, but also as a CSS code provider;
Resource that comes alongside the course:
· GitHub repository with all codes divided by modules;
· GitBook with extra explanations;
· Newsletter from time to time, delivered to your e-mail box;
· Q&A section, inside the platform;
· Constant upgrades on the course, no need to buy again!
· And more, check it out!
See that the full app is already available, including the numerical part, and you can after completing the course, just go on studying the codes already on GitHub. I have published a NPM library for this app called ngx-mat-miyagi-dolab. Just give it a try: npm i ngx-mat-miyagi-dolab
Join me on this endeavor!
Would you like to know more about my thinking patterns? now my e-book is on Amazon! Look for “My selected assays from Medium on Computer programming: Angular, JavaScript, Machine Learning, TensorFlow.js and more!”
Good studies! Learning is a journey that starts with wanting to learn!
About my past experience and expertise
I have done a postdoc where I have developed a platform in Angular from scratch, alone as programmer, on the Angular part. See “Galaxy and MEAN Stack to Create a User-Friendly Workflow for the Rational Optimization of Cancer Chemotherapy, published in Frontiers in Genetics”.
I have a project called IdeaCoding Lab, and write to Medium on Angular.
Feel free to Google me!
Course Curriculum
Chapter 1: Let's get started!
Lecture 1: Initial settings and words
Lecture 2: Meet StackBlitz: build your Angular app online
Lecture 3: "Miyagi-Do lab: science is for self-defense only!": the app we going to build
Lecture 4: Meet "the 3 stages log in strategy", the same used by YouTube
Lecture 5: Additional remarks and have a nice course
Lecture 6: User's guide: some information you may to know
Chapter 2: Module 1: creating our project and first component
Lecture 1: Initial remarks
Lecture 2: Our Figma project
Lecture 3: Creating the project using Angular CLI
Lecture 4: Presenting the Angular basic, standard project
Lecture 5: Meet Unit Testing in Angular: basic tests
Lecture 6: Creating our first component: the layout component
Chapter 3: Module 2: creating our first unit tests
Lecture 1: Initial words and preparation
Lecture 2: Creating our dashboard component
Lecture 3: Creating our first routing
Lecture 4: Testing our routing
Lecture 5: A crash course on Angular Unit Testing
Lecture 6: Mocking components: meet the library ng-mocks
Lecture 7: Mocking the Routing Module
Chapter 4: Module 3: building our header and footer, using test
Lecture 1: Initial words
Lecture 2: Quick recap
Lecture 3: Mocking child components in Angular
Lecture 4: Configuring our footer and header: using Figma to autogenerate our CSS code
Lecture 5: The three types of error checking: unit testing as the third-error testing level
Lecture 6: Editing and Unit testing the footer component
Lecture 7: Editing the header components, and some final ajustments
Chapter 5: Module 4: build the menu
Lecture 1: build the menu
Chapter 6: Closing
Chapter 7: Bonus section: attachments
Lecture 1: Does Angular really sucks?
Lecture 2: A crash course on Angular
Lecture 3: Can I build my full and functional Angular app for free? yes, you can!
Chapter 8: bonus section: selected cuts from the course
Lecture 1: The 3As technique for unit testing
Lecture 2: What the hell is a test? #shorts
Instructors
-
Jorge Guerra Pires
Independent Researcher, PhD -
IdeaCoding Lab
IdeaCodingLab: Transforme sua ideia em linhas de códigos -
Theoretical and Mathematical biology
Online course creator | e-learning
Rating Distribution
- 1 stars: 1 votes
- 2 stars: 1 votes
- 3 stars: 0 votes
- 4 stars: 1 votes
- 5 stars: 3 votes
Frequently Asked Questions
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