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AwesomeNextSteps

The next steps towards Project Awesome

Remember the submodules

  • Project Awesome uses submodules (currently just purl)
  • Submodules are "repos inside repos"--essentially "symbolic links" to other repos containing libraries that this project depends on.
  • So, after you clone this repo, always do this first:
  • git submodule init
  • git submodule update
  • Those two commands populate the subdirectories with the submodule contents.

Actually making a quiz

To actually see a quiz, start in either start.html or startAdvanced.html:

The start.html is a simple UI that was never intended for anything other than programmer testing of Project Awesome modules. Before this thing is a viable product for use by faculty or students, it needs to be replace with something more humane.

Ditto with the startAdvanced.html, which provides the ability to make a quiz from a JSON description.

The Directories

  • html contains html files for a very basic user interface for debugging the Project Awesome question generating modules.
  • js contains the JavaScript files that form the core Project Awesome functionality in its current state
  • LICENSE self-explanatory
  • purl subdirectory for the purl submodule (its own repo), a separate project that provides access to URL parameters
  • README.md the file you are now reading
  • test subdirectory with HTML and js for supporting testing.
  • node.js contains scripts for testing certain question types against ground truth. For example, for questions that generate Python code and ask "what is the output", a script in this directory generate the Python, runs it, and compares the actual result printed against Project Awesome's calculated answer.
  • schema contains quiz.json, an example of a quiz built using the JSON schema format and schema.json, the description of the JSON schema.

More detail on each directory

  • html contains these html files:

  • quiz.html which is an html file that gets "called" from start.html, or startAdvanced.html with URL params to generate a quiz.

  • start.html which is a simple UI (lousy) from which a quiz can be generated

  • startAdvanced.html which is a slightly more advanced (but still lousy) UI from which a quiz can be generated

  • js contains these files and directories:

  • bits.js contains JavaScript methods for bitwise and shift operators on numbers that are larger than 32-bits.

  • interpretJSON.js contains JavaScript code to read in a QuizJSON object and return an array of question objects.

  • questions contains JavaScript files that describe different quiz question types.

  • questionTypes.js contains the locations of the available quiz question types.

  • quiz.js contains utility methods required to build a quiz.

  • random.js contains JavaScript for generating reproducable random numbers based on a given seed.

  • utils.js contains various JavaScript utility methods.