In this worksheet you will learn how to configure your work environment using VS Code. You should start by installing Visual Studio Code (NOT VISUAL STUDIO!) from the website, note that it might already be installed. If you are using a Coventry University computer and the software is not installed you can do this using AppsAnywhere.
If you are using Windows 10 you will also need to install Git, this may already be installed on a Coventry University computer.
Visual Studio Code comes with an integrated Terminal that can be used instead of the standard Command Prompt or Terminal. If you are using Linux or MacOS this will give you a Bash prompt however on Windows 10 it defaults to the Command Prompt and will need to be changed to the Bash Shell.
Press CTRL-SHIFT-P and a selection box should appear at the top of the editor. Type in default shell
and click on the Terminal: Select Default Shell
option.
Now the integrated terminal uses the Bash Shell meaning you can use the standard *nix bash commands!
On some versions of Windows 10, some extra configuration is required before Bash Shell is able to be selected within VS Code. If this is the case on your machine, follow the below troubleshooting steps before reattempting to change your shell as above.
To start, we need to make sure Developer Mode is enabled in the Update and Security section of Windows 10. Press WIN+R (Windows Key and R simultaneosly) to open a Run dialog. In the dialog enter ms-settings:developers followed by the enter key. The window shown below should appear on screen.
Select the Developer mode radio button and yes on any succeeding dialog boxes. Wait for any neccessary installations to complete.
Once that has completed, we need to enable the WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux). Press WIN+R, in the dialog enter powershell followed by the enter key. In the powershell window copy and paste the following:
Start-Process powershell -Verb runAs
exit
Press the enter key and accept the UAC (User Account Control) dialog. A new powershell window will launch with Administrator rights.
Copy and paste the following:
Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux
Press the enter key and wait for the process to complete. Once complete, restart your computer before continuing.
Finally, we need to install Ubuntu from the Microsoft Store. Click the blue Get button and accept any dialogs to launch the Microsoft Store and begin the installation. Once Ubuntu for WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) has installed, restart Windows.
Once restarted, reattempt to enable Bash Shell in VS Code as per the section above.
You should start by logging in to the University GitHub server using your university username and password. Make sure you don't log into GitHub.com! s Next you should open the web page containing the foundation materials and click on the small Fork button in the top-right corner of the page
You will be asked to select where you want to place the forked repository, make sure you choose your own personal space (the one that is named using your username).
This will create an exact copy (clone) of the repository in your personal workspace. It should indicate where the original version was (see below).
Locate the green Clone or Download button and click this. You will see the option to clone with HTTPS. Click on the copy icon as shown to copy the URL to the clipboard.
Make sure the url begins with https://
, if it begins with git
you need to click in the small Use HTTPS link!
Launch the terminal app (Mac and Linux users) or Bash Shell (Windows 10 users). Now use this to navigate to the directory where you want to store the lab materials. You should use the following bash commands:
ls
is used to see the contents of the current directory.pwd
prints the path to the current directory.cd
changes to the directory you specify,cd ..
takes you to the parent directory.
When you are in the chosen location you need to clone the repository using the URL we copied earlier:
git clone xxx
Replacing xxx with the content of the clipboard.
This will create a directory called foundation
which contains all the content from the repository.
Now you can launch Visual Studio Code and use the File menu to open this foundation/
directory.
Hello world If you are using Windows 10 you will need to carry out some additional steps before starting the lab exercises:
- Open the integrated terminal using the Terminal menu.
- Type - Select Default Shell
- Select Git Bash from the options
- Click on the + icon in the terminal window.
This will open a new Git Bash shell in the project directory.
Next we need to install and configure NodeJS. If you are using MacOS or Linux the first task is to install the Node Version Manager tool. You can find detailed instructions.
Once installed you may need to restart your computer. Now check it was installed correctly:
$ command -v nvm
nvm
Now we can install the latest version of NodeJS:
nvm install node
node -v
If you are running Windows 10 you need to download the installer for the Current version of NodeJS (12.10 at the time of writing).
Use the terminal to navigate to the exercises/01_setup/
directory and try running the index.js
script:
$ cd exercises/01_setup/
$ node index.js
Error: Cannot find module 'koa'
If you are using Windows 10 you will need to use the command prompt instead and navigate to the 01_setup/
directory.
Notice you get an error, we need to install the missing module using the Node Package Manager tool. We can then try to run the script again:
$ npm install koa
$ node index.js
app listening on port 8080
Now we have the server up and running so the final task is to view the web page using the web browser. Simply open the Chrome browser and navigate to localhost:8080 where you should see a message. If this works you are ready to start the lab exercises.
As you work through the lab activities two things are likely to happen:
- You make changes to the code that you want to push to the forked copy of your repository.
- You will need to pull any bug fixes from the original repository.
Before you start interacting with the GitHub server you need to configure the local repository. Open the Bash Shell and run the following commands:
git config user.name 'John Doesss'
git config user.email 'doej@coventry.ac.uk'
remember to replace the values with you own name and your university email (but without the uni part).
NOTE: You only need to carry out this step when you have make changes to the code! This will normally need to take place each time you complete a "Test Your Understanding" section.
As you save your changes you will see a blue circle against the Source Control tab that indicates how many files have been changed, we need to get these changed files up to GitHub. Start by opening the tab, you will see a list of all the files you have changed.
- Click on the + button to stage these changes.
- Type in a commit message to explain what changes you have made.
- Click in the tick button to commit the changes.
Now you should click on the Sync icon (shown below) to push the new commit up to your GitHub repository, this will also pull doen any commits that are on the GitHub server but that you don't have on your local computer. The first number is the number of commits it will pull from GitHub (down arrow) and the second the number of commits it will push from your local computer to GitHub (up arrow).
At this point you should be able to refresh your GitHub repository page to see the changes.
As new materials and resources are added to the original repository (and bugs fixed) you will want to merge these into your forked repository. Before you can do this you will need to add a link to the upstream repository. Open a bash shell:
git remote add upstream https://github.coventry.ac.uk/web/foundation.git
git remote -v
Now, every time you have committed and pushed you changes you can pull the changes from the master repository:
git fetch upstream
git checkout master
git merge upstream/master
Don't worry if you don't understand what is happening, this will be explained in a future lab.