For this code test you are going to make a weather app using React and Redux. The application should make use of redux state, action creators, reducers, routing, and persistence with local storage. You should also use React Toolbox to follow the material design wireframes we've provided. Any assets you need should be included in this repo in the folder "Assets" or available through one of the libraries listed below.
We have provided with you with the app's basic boilerplate and webpack configurations. You should only have to build any necessary components, action creators, reducers, etc. React Hot Loader is enabled as well, so saving a component should update it in the browser.
Make sure you have Node >= v4.0. Then run the following commands:
npm install
npm start
The app will start on localhost:3000
.
This app makes use of PostCSS and basic CSS Modules. We have included the following PostCSS plugins:
We have pre-loaded the React-Toolbox library for you. This library provides you with many pre-built Material Design components that you can import as needed.
You can override any React Toolbox settings in src/theme/_config.scss
.
The landing page should have a header bar that lists the current date. It should also have an edit button that is visible if there are any cities listed. Clicking the edit button turns on edit mode, which allows the user to remove a city. There should be a FAB button at the bottom right of the screen that is fixed. Clicking on it should open a dialog box that lets the user search for a city to add to their favorites list.
The main body of the landing page is the list of the user's favorite cities. For every city the user has added you should pull the forecast from a weather API and display some data. The background of the city card should be dynamically created based on the city's current weather. Clicking on a city card should route the user to a city detail page.
There is an empty state in the case that a user doesn't have any favorite cities.
We recommend utilizing the Google Places Autocomplete API to generate autocompleted search results when a user starts typing in a city name. However, you have freedom to implement this however you like.
The city detail page should display additional weather information for the chosen city. The header on the detail page should change to display the name of the city with a close icon to go back to the main list. The FAB button should not be displayed on the city detail page.
There should be a snapshot of today with information about the current weather, as well as a future six-day forecast.
The background color of the city detail page should be dynamically determined based on the city's current weather, just like on the landing page.
- Persistence - If the user refreshes the browser their favorite cities should continue to show on the landing page.
- Navigating to a city not in the user's favorite's list - You do not have to implement this, but have at least have an error state.
Feel free to do one or more of these bonuses if you have time.
- Add a graph that displays the forecast for the next twelve hours in more detail.
- A settings panel where the user can switch between fahrenheit/celsius or actual temperature/feels like temperature.
- The ability to rearrange city cards on the landing page. The new order should persist.
- Responsive Design - We have not provided responsive wireframes, but do implement media queries to ensure the design looks good at various browser sizes.
Bundled with this code test you should find a Sketch file with wireframes. You can download a fully functional free trial of Sketch from their website.
- Forecast.io - This is the recommended weather API I. It provides a ton of weather data and allows for up to 1000 API calls per day for free. The main downside with this API is that it has CORS preventing requests directly from the browser. If you want to use this library you can clone a simple reverse proxy server. Spin it up locally and send all API requests through that server instead of directly through Forecast.io. Alternatively, you can use any other weather API you choose, as long as it provides the data required in the designs.
- Google Places Autocomplete - React Geosuggest is a great library that implements the Google Places API. You can use this library to more easily implement autocomplete.
- Skycons - The Forecast.io API returns an icon parameter for every forecast. You can use that parameter and this API to easily display animated weather icons.
- React Toolbox - This is a framework that includes a number of Material Designed components. Using this will make it easier for you to follow the provided designs.
We will be reviewing your submission based on the following:
- Does it function as expected?
- Does the layout match the design provided?
- Code style and organization.
- Proper usage of libraries and frameworks.
Please provide adequate instructions to setup and run your submission locally. Please provide your solution zipped via email. Do not host publicly.