This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Asad Naveed Malik
Overview
Hello everyone,
Today I will help you get started on your first web application by using HTML, CSS, Javascript, and concepts of dom manipulation so let's get started on a simple web application like a Pomodoro App.
Once you’ve learned to create this web app you will have ample capabilities to create multiple web apps. Because this app includes taking data from users and manipulating the app according to that data and displaying them in real-time.
What's a Pomodoro? Using the Pomodoro method, you break your workday into 25-minute chunks separated by five-minute breaks. These intervals are referred to as Pomodoro
This is how our app will look like:
Demo
You can test the application from here.
Libraries
In our first part, we’ll be looking into the layout of our web application, we will use the help of a library called Bootstrap.
Bootstrap can help you create web apps and websites very quickly as you will only have to call classes on an HTML file instead of worrying about styling in your CSS file.
Other libraries we will be using are Font Awesome and dateFNS that will help with our icons and buttons and with our time calculations.
To start using the libraries just add this block of code inside your HTML file's <head> tag to get started with bootstrap and Font Awesome.
<!-- Bootstrap-->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.4.1/css/bootstrap.min.css"/>
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.4.1.slim.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/popper.js@1.16.0/dist/umd/popper.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://stackpath.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/4.4.1/js/bootstrap.min.js"></script>
<!-- Font Awesome -->
<script src="https://kit.fontawesome.com/996973c893.js"></script>
And for dateFNS add this CDN link to the bottom of your HTML code, right above the <body> tag
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/date-fns/1.30.1/date_fns.min.js"></script>
Front-End
Layout
To understand our layout, first, we have the main container <div>
<div class="container">
...
</div>
Then we have the 6 divs inside the main container
- Heading
- Main Timer
- Finished Message
- Inputs
- Buttons
- Sessions List
For the heading, we will simply use the heading tag <h3>
<!-- Heading -->
<h1 class="text-center my-5 heading">Pomodoro</h1>
For our main timer, we will be using bootstrap's grid-system row and col to align our timer inside our timer container. There's nothing written inside it because we will be adding the initial values of the timer via javascript.
<!-- Main Timer -->
<div class="container timer">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-5">
<h4 id="minutes"></h4>
</div>
<div class="col-2">
<h4>:</h4>
</div>
<div class="col-5">
<h4 id="seconds"></h4>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Whenever a session finishes we want the user to be notified, here a message will pop up when a session ends and it's time for a break or when a break session ends. This is also empty because we will be using Javascript to add the message.
<!-- Finished Message -->
<div class="my-5">
<h3 id="done" class="text-center"></h3>
</div>
Now for the inputs, we have three inputs, task name, work time, break time, and aligning them we use bootstrap’s flexbox system,
Input tags are used for user input and are given unique IDs in their attributes
<!-- User Input Timer -->
<div class="inputs container my-5 d-block justify-content-center">
<div class="work-name d-flex justify-content-center my-4">
<div class="d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Task Name</h5>
<input id ="taskname" type="text" name=taskname placeholder = "Enter task name">
</div>
</div>
<div class="timers d-flex justify-content-center">
<div class = "d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Work Duration</h3>
<input id= "worktime" type="text" name="worktime" placeholder="Enter Work Time" value=25>
</div>
<div class="d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Break Duration</h3>
<input id= "breaktime" type="text" name="breaktime" placeholder="Enter Break Time" value=5>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Now we have four buttons, however, initially, we will have only two buttons visible.
- Start Button
- Pause Button
- Resume Button
- Reset Button
Pause and resume buttons are hidden initially using bootstraps ‘d-none’ class.
Also, we're using the <i> tag for the icons and calling 'fas fa-play fa-2x' class using the Font Awesome library.
<!-- Buttons-->
<div class="conatiner d-flex justify-content-center my-5">
<button id ="start-button" class="btn">
<i class="start-button fas fa-play fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="pause-button" class="btn d-none">
<i class="pause-button fas fa-pause fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="resume-button" class="btn d-none">
<i class="resume-button fas fa-play-circle fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="reset-button" class="btn" >
<i class="fas fa-redo-alt fa-2x"></i>
</button>
</div>
Lastly, we have our sessions list that we will add once a user clicks the reset button and stores the task name and the time it took for it to be completed.
<!-- Sessions List -->
<div id = "sessions" class="my-5">
<h2 class= "text-center">Sessions List</h2>
<ul id = "sessions-list" class="list-group todos mx-auto">
<!-- list of sessions will be appended here -->
</ul>
</div>
Our layout is done and it will look like this in HTML,
<div class="container">
<!-- Heading -->
<h1 class="text-center my-5 heading">Pomodoro</h1>
<!-- Main Timer -->
<div class="container timer">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-5">
<h4 id="minutes"></h4>
</div>
<div class="col-2">
<h4>:</h4>
</div>
<div class="col-5">
<h4 id="seconds"></h4>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- Finished Message -->
<div class="my-5">
<h3 id="done" class="text-center"></h3>
</div>
<!-- User Input Timer -->
<div class="inputs container my-5 d-block justify-content-center">
<div class="work-name d-flex justify-content-center my-4">
<div class="d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Task Name</h5>
<input id ="taskname" type="text" name=taskname placeholder = "Enter task name">
</div>
</div>
<div class="timers d-flex justify-content-center">
<div class = "d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Work Duration</h3>
<input id= "worktime" type="text" name="worktime" placeholder="Enter Work Time" value=25>
</div>
<div class="d-block justify-content-center text-center">
<h5>Break Duration</h3>
<input id= "breaktime" type="text" name="breaktime" placeholder="Enter Break Time" value=5>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- Buttons-->
<div class="conatiner d-flex justify-content-center my-5">
<button id ="start-button" class="btn">
<i class="start-button fas fa-play fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="pause-button" class="btn d-none">
<i class="pause-button fas fa-pause fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="resume-button" class="btn d-none">
<i class="resume-button fas fa-play-circle fa-2x"></i>
</button>
<button id ="reset-button" class="btn" >
<i class="fas fa-redo-alt fa-2x"></i>
</button>
</div>
<!-- Sessions List -->
<div id = "sessions" class="my-5">
<h2 class= "text-center">Sessions List</h2>
<ul id = "sessions-list" class="list-group todos mx-auto">
<!-- list of sessions will be appended here -->
</ul>
</div>
</div>
With some tweaks in CSS using these styling
body {
background: grey;
}
.timer {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
align-items: center;
text-align: center;
border: 20px solid white;
border-radius: 10rem;
width: 20rem;
height: 20rem;
}
.timer h4{
font-size: 4rem;
}
.row {
width: 100%;
}
.show_message {
display: block;
}
We have our final layout and will look like this.
Back-End
Our front-end part of the application is done, now for the second part we will be using Javascript for the back-end. Here is where you start manipulating the DOM.
Connect your javascript file using this block of code right above the
tag.<script src="main.js"></script>
A good practice for any developer is to organize your code, I’ve already organized my code into functions and event listeners.
Let's get Started
Our very first function is the setInitialTime() function that basically sets the timer to 0:00 on load.
To do this we will use the most common method for DOM manipulation that is query selection, it can be done using:
- document.querySelector
- document.getElementById
- document.getElementsByClassName
- document.querySelectorAll
Over here we’ll use document.getElementById and call the elements ID and the innerHTML property that returns the HTML content of the element.
document.getElementByID(“minutes”).innerHTML
We will simply assign our minutes and seconds element to our already declared sessions_seconds and session_minutes variable.
let session_seconds = "00";
let session_minutes = 00;
function setInitialTime() {
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
}
We need this function to execute every time the page loads, so the best place for this is in our <body> tag and use onload event on its attribute.
<body onload="setInitialTime()">
Now every time our page loads the timer will be 0:00 like this
Our second function is the main function for our timer which is the start_work() function
To get started firstly we need to gather all our inputs using document.getElementById and .value which returns the content inside the input box. And then simply assign them to our timer again using getElementById and .innerHTML
function start_work() {
taskName = document.getElementById("taskname").value;
const workTime = document.getElementById('worktime').value;
const breakTime = document.getElementById('breaktime').value;
session_minutes = workTime-1;
session_seconds = 59;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
Now to execute our timer we will be using a JS method called setInterval()
The setInterval() method calls a function or evaluates an expression at specified intervals (in milliseconds). The setInterval() method will continue calling the function until clearInterval() is called,
// Intervals for minutes and seconds
minutes_interval = setInterval(minutesTimer, 60000);
seconds_interval = setInterval(secondsTimer, 1000);
We’ve put them in a variable because we need to stop this interval using clearInterval() which we will define what interval to stop and where.
Now to execute these setInterval() methods we need two functions
One function will decrement our minutes in the timer, meaning every 60 seconds it will be decreased by one,
The second function will decrement our seconds in the timer, meaning every 1 second it will be decreased by one, however, upon reaching 0 it will reassign session_seconds to 60 again and continue the interval from 60 to 0. This specific process will repeat until the minutes timer also hits 0.
Hence we will be using a nested if condition.
Our first function for minutes,
function minutesTimer() {
session_minutes = session_minutes - 1;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
}
The second function for seconds,
function secondsTimer() {
session_seconds = session_seconds - 1;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
// nested if condition here
}
Once both minutes and seconds timer hits zero we will call clearInterval to stop the timer. And pop up a message similarly using getElementById and .innerHTML and start our next timer which is the break timer.
if (session_seconds <= 0) {
if (session_minutes <= 0) {
// stop all intervals when both seconds and minutes are 0
clearInterval(minutes_interval);
clearInterval(seconds_interval);
// pop up message to take break
document.getElementById("done").innerHTML = "Session Done, Take a Break!";
document.getElementById("done").classList.add("show_message");
//start break timer
start_break(breakTime);
}
// reset seconds to 60 whenever it reaches 0
session_seconds = 60;
}
Now on to our third main function is the break timer which executes once the work timer hits zero. Since it has the same working we will be copy-pasting the start_work() function and making a few changes like removing the query selection of the inputs and popping a different message and adding the start_work() function upon timer hitting zero. Adding the start_work() upon timer hitting zero will allow both functions to execute each other in an infinite loop until the reset button is pressed.
Both our functions will look similar and will look like this.
function start_work() {
taskName = document.getElementById("taskname").value;
const workTime = document.getElementById('worktime').value;
const breakTime = document.getElementById('breaktime').value;
session_minutes = workTime-1;
session_seconds = 59;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
// Intervals for minutes and seconds
minutes_interval = setInterval(minutesTimer, 60000);
seconds_interval = setInterval(secondsTimer, 1000);
// functions for the intervals
function minutesTimer() {
session_minutes = session_minutes - 1;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
}
function secondsTimer() {
session_seconds = session_seconds - 1;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
if (session_seconds <= 0) {
if (session_minutes <= 0) {
// stop all intervals when both seconds and minutes are 0
clearInterval(minutes_interval);
clearInterval(seconds_interval);
// pop up message to take break
document.getElementById("done").innerHTML = "Session Done, Take a Break!";
document.getElementById("done").classList.add("show_message");
//start break timer
start_break(breakTime);
}
// reset seconds to 60 whenever it reaches 0
session_seconds = 60;
}
}
}
function start_break(breakTime) {
session_minutes = breakTime-1;
session_seconds = 59;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
minutes_interval = setInterval(minutesTimer, 60000);
seconds_interval = setInterval(secondsTimer, 1000);
function minutesTimer() {
session_minutes = session_minutes - 1;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
}
function secondsTimer() {
session_seconds = session_seconds - 1;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
if (session_seconds <= 0) {
if (session_minutes <= 0) {
clearInterval(minutes_interval);
clearInterval(seconds_interval);
document.getElementById("done").innerHTML = "Break Finished! Continue Working now!";
document.getElementById("done").classList.add("show_message");
// start work timer
start_work()
}
// reset seconds to 60 whenever it reaches 0
session_seconds = 60;
}
}
}
Our last three functions
The reset function stops the intervals and assigns the timer to zero, this will be executed upon hitting the reset button.
function reset(){
//stopping all intervals
clearInterval(minutes_interval)
clearInterval(seconds_interval)
// setting the initial values of the clock (same as setInitialTime())
let session_seconds = "00";
let session_minutes = 00;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
}
startTime and stopTime returns the current date and time using the Date object. We will execute this upon hitting the start button and reset button respectively.
//start the counter for total time
function startTime(){
const dateNow = new Date();
return dateNow
}
//stop the counter total time
function stopTime(){
const dateNow = new Date()
return dateNow
}
Now we can move to our button executions,
When a user clicks on a button we want some action to happen. For this, we will be using a method called addEventListener()
This method executes a callback function upon a specific event of that element.
Over here our element is the button, our event is ‘click’ and our callback function will be shown later.
This is a basic template of how an event listener is used on a button
document.getElementById("myBtn").addEventListener("click", function() {
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = "Hello World";
});
We will be using four event listeners as we have four buttons and perform different actions upon the event ‘click’
The first event listener is the for the start button, it executes our main start_work() function which also executes the start_break() function and is repeated until the reset button is pressed.
Now using the property .classlist we can add and remove classes from an element, here we will be adding and removing the d-none class that will make our buttons appear and reappear, once the start button is pressed, the pause button appears and the start button disappears.
// On click of the play button, execute the start_work() timer
document.getElementById("start-button").addEventListener("click", () => {
start_work();
start = startTime()
//remove the play button, add pause button
document.getElementById("start-button").classList.add("d-none")
document.getElementById("pause-button").classList.remove("d-none")
});
The second event listener is for the pause button which pauses our timer and disappears the pause button and pops up the resume button. To pause the timer we’re using clearIntervals
// Pause the timer
document.getElementById("pause-button").addEventListener("click", () =>{
clearInterval(minutes_interval)
clearInterval(seconds_interval)
//remove pause button, reappear resume button
document.getElementById("pause-button").classList.add("d-none")
document.getElementById("resume-button").classList.remove("d-none")
} )
Our third event listener resumes the timer using the same method used in start_work() and start_break() functions and reappears the pause button and similarly removes the resume and start button.
// When timer is paused, resume the timer
document.getElementById("resume-button").addEventListener("click", () => {
minutes_interval = setInterval(()=> {
session_minutes = session_minutes - 1;
document.getElementById("minutes").innerHTML = session_minutes;},
60000);
seconds_interval = setInterval(() => {
session_seconds = session_seconds - 1;
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = session_seconds;
}, 1000);
//reappear pause button, remove resume and start button
document.getElementById("pause-button").classList.remove("d-none")
document.getElementById("resume-button").classList.add("d-none")
document.getElementById("start-button").classList.add("d-none")
})
Now for our last part of our web app, we’re implementing the reset event listener.
Upon reset button click, we’re calling the reset() function, calling the current date and time upon the reset button’s click, and then using the datefns library we’re calling its distanceIntoWords() method that returns the difference between two date/time in words. E.g in two minutes, in 30 minutes.
document.getElementById("reset-button").addEventListener("click", () => {
reset();
stopp = stopTime()
totalTime = dateFns.distanceInWords(start, stopp, {addSuffix: true})
Now we want to append this total time into our session list so we use the querySelector method to call the unordered list <ul> from our HTML and append it inside it using template literal.
const completedSessionList = document.querySelector('#sessions-list')
const html = `<li class="list-group-item d-flex justify-content-between align-items-center">${taskName} was completed ${totalTime}</li>`;
completedSessionList.innerHTML += html;
Now for the remaining part, we’re removing the pop-up message and for the buttons, we’re making the play button reappear, remove the pause button, and remove the resume button. And that will completely reset our timer.
//remove the 'take break, continue work' messages
document.getElementById("done").innerHTML = "";
document.getElementById("done").classList.remove("show_message");
// make the play button reappear, remove pause button, remove resume button
document.getElementById("start-button").classList.remove("d-none")
document.getElementById("pause-button").classList.add("d-none")
document.getElementById("resume-button").classList.add("d-none")
And that's about it now you’re done with your first web application, once you’ve learned to build this you can easily build any small web application that uses DOM manipulation. Feel free to mess around with code and add your own stylings by downloading the source code from below.
Source Code
You can download the full source code from here.
This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Asad Naveed Malik
Asad Naveed Malik | Sciencx (2021-04-27T13:10:51+00:00) Get Started on your first Web App, Pomodoro Web App. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/04/27/get-started-on-your-first-web-app-pomodoro-web-app/
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