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Building Applications with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2

You're reading from  Building Applications with Spring 5 and Vue.js 2

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788836968
Pages 590 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
James J. Ye James J. Ye
Profile icon James J. Ye
Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Modern Web Application Development - This Is a New Era 2. Vue.js 2 - It Works in the Way You Expected 3. Spring 5 - The Right Stack for the Job at Hand 4. TaskAgile - A Trello-like Task Management Tool 5. Data Modeling - Designing the Foundation of the Application 6. Code Design - Designing for Stability and Extensibility 7. RESTful API Design - Building Language Between Frontend and Backend 8. Creating the Application Scaffold - Taking off Like a Rocket 9. Forms and Validation - Starting with the Register Page 10. Spring Security - Making Our Application Secure 11. State Management and i18n - Building a Home Page 12. Flexbox Layout and Real-Time Updates with WebSocket - Creating Boards 13. File Processing and Scalability - Playing with Cards 14. Health Checking, System Monitoring - Getting Ready for Production 15. Deploying to the Cloud with Jenkins - Ship It Continuously 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Creating wireframes


When you look at the user stories of the TaskAgile applications that we just wrote, they are clear and small. But they omit important details that developers need in order to start the implementation.

In fact, user stories are only starting points for discussions on requirements. For example, when you look at a story login, you would ask questions such as, do we need to add a placeholder for each input field? Do we need to add labels for these fields? If we do, should the labels be to the right of the fields or above the fields? Different people can have different ideas about how to implement a user story.

Creating wireframes for user stories can help everybody understand what needs to be built. And you can link wireframes back to user stories which will become the pointers of implementation details.

You can use paper and pencils to create the wireframe or write them on a whiteboard. These two ways are straightforward, but not maintainable and not easy to be shared within...

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