# SIMRS - FE
RSSA - Front End
> [!IMPORTANT]
> Read this following instructions before doing your job
## Framework Guide
- [Vue Style Guide](https://vuejs.org/style-guide)
- [Nuxt Style Guide](https://nuxt.com/docs/4.x/guide)
- [Shadcn Vue @radix-ui](https://radix.shadcn-vue.com/)
## Configuration
- `nuxt.config.ts`
Nuxt configuration file
- `.env`
Some environment variables
## Directory Structure for `app/`
- `app.vue`: Main layout
- `components` : Contains all reusable UI components.
- `components/content` : Entry point for business logic and workflows. Pages or routes call these content components to handle API requests and process application logic
- `components/app` : View-layer components that manage and present data. These are used within `content/` to render or handle specific parts of the UI, and return results back to the content
- `components/pub` : Public/shared components used across different parts of the app.
- `composables` : Contains reusable logic and utility functions (e.g. composables, hooks)..
- `layouts` : Reusable UI layout patterns used across pages.
- `models` : Contains data definitions or interfaces.
- `schemas` : Contains JSON schemas used for validation.
- `services` : Contains reusable API calls and business logic.
## Directory Structure for `app/pages`
- `pages/auth` : Authentication related pages.
- `pages/(features)` : Grouped feature modules that reflect specific business content or domains.
## Directory Structure for `server/`
- `server/api` : API or proxy requests
## Workflows
The basic development workflow follows these steps:
### Define Your Data in `models/`
- Create data definitions or interfaces.
- These should represent the structure of the data used across your app.
### Build UI Components in `components/app`
- Create reusable UI and app specific components.
- Keep components pure, avoid making HTTP requests directly within them.
- They receive data via props and emit events upward.
### Business Logic in `components/content`
- This layer connects the UI with the logic (API calls, validations, navigation).
- It composes components from `components/app/`, `components/pub/`, and other content.
- Also responsible for managing state, side effects, and interactions.
### Create Pages in `pages/`
- Define permissions and guards for each page.
- Pages load the appropriate content from `components/content/`.
- They do not contain UI or logic directly, just route level layout or guards.
### Validation
- UI level validation in `components/app`. help users avoid mistakes before submitting.
- Lightweight/instant validation related to UX.
- Basic formatting (email regex, numeric-only, password length).
- Showing error messages directly under the field.
- Business level validation in `components/flow`. cannot rely only on the UI, since it often requires server-side checks or rules that may change.
- More complex validation rules tied to business logic.
## Code Conventions
- Under the script setup block, putting things in group with the following order:
- Imports → all dependencies, sorted by external, alias (~), and relative imports.
- Props & Emits → clearly define component inputs & outputs.
- State & Computed → all ref, reactive, and computed variables grouped together.
- Lifecycle Hooks → grouped by mounting → updating → unmounting order.
- Functions → async first (fetching, API calls), then utility & event handlers.
- Watchers → if needed, put them at the bottom.
- Template → keep clean and minimal logic, use methods/computed instead of inline JS.
- Declaration Naming
- Uses PascalCase for `type` naming
- Uses camelCase for `variable` and `const` naming
- Underscore can be used to indicates that a variable has derived from an attribute of an object
for example: `person_name` indicates it is an attribute `name` from object `person`
- Looping
- Uses `i`, `j`, `k` as variable for `for` looping index
- Uses `item` as object instantition for `forEach` loop callback
- Uses `item` as object instantition for `v-for` loop callback in the template
## Git Workflows
The basic git workflow follows these steps:
1. Create a new branch on `dev`
- branch name should be `feat/` or `fix/`
2. Make your changes
3. Commit your changes
- commit msg format: `[type]: [description]`
- `type` can be `feat`, `fix`, `docs`, `style`, `refactor`, `perf`, `test`, `build`, `ci`, `chore`, `revert`
- `description` should be a brief description of the changes
- Example: `feat: add new feature`
4. Push your changes to `dev`
5. Create a pull request from `dev` to `main`