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日期:2018-11-27 10:56

CO539 Assessment 2

Food Hygiene Ratings

Introduction

For this assessment, you are going to use jQuery and AJAX to make a dynamic web page that communicates

with two server-side scripts that we have developed for you.

The first script uses data from the Food Standards Agency. The Food Standards Agency makes the

results of restaurants’ (and other businesses serving food) hygiene inspections publicly available

(see here: http://www.food.gov.uk), and we have developed a simple PHP script that will provide

the results of the inspections for Medway in JSON format.

The second script is uses data from Google Places. Google Places provides (among other data)

customer ratings for restaurants and other businesses. We have developed a PHP script that will

provide the customer ratings for some businesses in Medway in JSON format.

Requirements & constraints: You should contain all of your work on this assignment in a single HTML file.

Use CSS embedded in the page’s header for formatting, likewise for your JavaScript code. You must use the

jQuery library (i.e., avoid plain JavaScript where jQuery can be used) and, for Part 3, the jQueryUI library (and

its CSS if you wish). You cannot use any other jQuery plugins, external CSS, or any other JavaScript libraries.

You should submit your single HTML file via Moodle before the deadline.

Part1:HygieneRatings(50%)

Part 1 focuses on hygiene ratings. The main challenges are: setting up AJAX calls and pagination.

TheServer-SideScript

The server-side script is hosted at the following URL:

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/hygiene.php

The script can be manipulated using several GET parameters. Accessing the script without any parameters

returns the first 10 businesses’ ratings in JSON format for testing. The parameters accepted by the script are

documented in the table below.

Parameter

Name

Description

operation

This is the most important parameter, controlling what type of information the script is to

return. The operation parameter can be set to one of the following values:

demo Returns the first 10 businesses’ ratings (default operation)

get Returns a “page” of (20) results. Expects the page parameter

pages Returns how many pages of results are available

search Returns the first 20 records for businesses whose name contain

the specified search term. Expects the name parameter.

page Used only by the get operation. Expects an integer specifying which page of results to

retrieve. For example, page=2 would return the 2nd page of results.

name Used only by the search operation. Expects a string specifying the search term business

names are to be matched against.

html Shows the full data set as HTML, example:

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/hygiene.php?html

Examples:

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/hygiene.php?operation=get&page=7

These parameters make the script retrieve the 7th page of results.

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/hygiene.php?operation=search&name=Eat

These parameters make the script find businesses whose names contain the string “Eat”.

JSONFormatofReturnedData

The demo, get, and search operations all return data in the same JSON format. The format is an array of

individual JavaScript objects, with each object having the following properties:

fhrsId The ID of the inspection record.

name The name of the business inspected.

addressLine The address, including post code, of the business inspected.

hygieneRating The rating (out of 5) awarded to the business.

ratingDate The date on which the inspection was carried out.

postcode The postcode of the business

The pages operation returns a single JSON object, with a single “pages” property. This property contains the

number of pages of results that are available.

Accessing theScript

The script outputs special HTTP headers, called Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS, https://enablecors.org/),

which will allow your browser to access the script using AJAX requests regardless of where your

HTML file is, in spite of the same origin policy. This means that you can complete this work from home

without needing a webserver or database. We have hosted the script on a publicly-accessible webserver, so

you don’t need to use the VPN either. Because of the way these headers are interpreted by your browser,

you must use the form of URL given above. Leaving out the www. will cause the CORS to fail.

Task1.1 – RetrievingtheFirstPageofResultsWhenthePageLoads(25%)

Write an HTML page containing a title, some text explaining what the page does, and an empty table. Use

jQuery and an AJAX request (you must use the jQuery function $.get to do this) to the server-side script to

populate the table with the first page (page 1) of results when the page loads. You may omit the id of the

inspection record in your table. Furthermore, you will want to avoid visualising the postcode twice. The

screenshot below shows you what the output might look like.

Task1.2 – ABasicPaginator(25%)

Your page should now perform an additional AJAX request when the page loads (you must use the jQuery

function $.get to do this). This request should find out the number of pages of inspection results that are

available from the server-side script. Once you have found this out, create a row of buttons, one for each

page. Each button should be labelled with a page number. The screenshot below shows you what your row

of buttons might look like.

Clicking one of the paginator buttons should empty the results table, perform an AJAX request to the serverside

script to fetch the requested page of results, and display them in the table.

Part2:Customerratings– mashup (25%)

Part 2 focuses on merging information from more than one source: the script you used in Part 1 and another

script we provide, with information on customer ratings. As before, the script outputs CORS headers, so you

can develop your solution from home.

TheServer-SideScript

The server-side script is hosted at the following URL:

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/rating.php

The script can be manipulated using several GET parameters, appended on to the end of the URL. The

parameters accepted by the script are documented in the table below.

Parameter

Name

Description

name

Expects a string specifying the search term business names are to be matched

against. Returns all matching records for businesses whose name contains the

specified search term. Each record will include the following information:

‘name’: the full name of the matching item,

‘locationId’: an identifier for the location, including the town name,

‘rating’: the current average customer rating of the matching item.

Example: https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/rating.php?name=kitchen

This parameter make the script find businesses whose names contain the string “kitchen”.

JSONFormatofReturnedData

The data is returned in JSON format. The format is an array of individual JavaScript objects, with each object

having the following properties:

name The name of the business matched.

locationId The town name, including country and some location id, of the business matched.

rating A customer rating (out of 5).

vicinity An approximate address.

If no business matched the given name the script returns an empty array. Note that for some businesses

there may not be a location id or rating available (in which case key is associated to null).

Task2.1 – RetrievingtheCustomerRatingwhenRequestedbytheUser (25%)

Extend each row of the table with one button that allows the user to retrieve the customers’ ratings for the

business in that row. The screenshot below shows you what the extended table might look like.

Each button must trigger an AJAX request (you must use the jQuery function $.get to do this) directed at

the server-side script rating.php. The customer rating for the (one) selected business is to be displayed in

a pop-up window.

Notes

buttons must be added to any table displayed, no matter if populated using the demo, page search,

or name search functionality from Phase 1.

The script rating.php may return more than one matching business. You need to find a way to

match the business you are looking for with one (the right one!) of those returned by rating.php.

You can, for example, try to match the town name.

If the customer rating is not available (e.g., rating.php returns the empty array, none of the

records returned matches the business you are looking for, or the matching business has empty

rating) then you must notify the user, also using a pop-up window.

Please note that the Google Place data set does not perfectly match the one of the Food Standard

Agency. This makes it impossible to get 100% correct results. Thus, extra care is needed to avoid

displaying wrongly attributed data.

To help you testing your web application, you can view the complete data available on

rating.php: https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/rating.php?html

Part3:SearchFunctionalitywithAutocomplete(20%)

In this part you will use your knowledge of jQuery and AJAX, together with the available documentation of

the jQueryUI API (https://jqueryui.com/autocomplete/), to learn to use a function that you may have not

seen before: the autocomplete function of jQueryUI.

Task3.1 – Addasearchinputwith(20%)

You need to add a form to the bottom of your search page containing a text input and a search button.

When the user enters text in the text input and clicks the button, your page should clear the results table,

perform an AJAX request (you must use the jQuery function $.get to do this) to the server-side script form

Part 1:

https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/sm951/co539/assessment2/hygiene.php

You need to retrieve any relevant results, and display them. The screenshot below shows you what your

form might look like.

After doing this, you need to apply the autocomplete function provided by jQueryUI to the input field. The

autocomplete function will initially have a pre-defined array of autocomplete tags, which you have to define

(initially, create an array containing at most four names of businesses at your choice). The autocomplete

function should now suggest the four default names when focusing on the input field.

Next, you need to let the array of autocomplete tags be extended with previous search information.

Concretely, every time the user clicks the search button, the name of each business returned by the script

hygiene.php should be added to the array of autocomplete tags, avoiding duplicates.

Recall that you need to import the jQueryUI libraries before using them (see URL below)

https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.min.js

Also, you may want to use the jQueryUI styles (see URL below)

https://code.jquery.com/ui/1.12.1/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.css

Design&CodeQuality(5%)

There are some marks available for the visual design of the page, which you should achieve using CSS. Pay

particular attention to the table in terms of size, spacing and margins to maximise usability. You should also

make sure that the paginator buttons are a suitable size. You should also ensure that your code is properly

commented, organised and laid out.


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