![]() ![]() ![]() And, inside each room is a collection of Stuff. It has a collection of Rooms, each having its own "RoomType" of "KitchenDining", "Bathroom", "Bedroom" or "CommonUse". I have a "House" having the properties "MaterialType" of "Bricks", and "Color" of "Red". It will ebb and flow.Īnd, the great thing about inventory management (or in my case of home inventory), you can treat your data like a literal house (figuratively speaking). I'm trying my hand at mySQL, and a command line interface, set up a restful API to return data, and then start on the interface, knowing that your data structure will inform you of things to do in the UI, but also that as you move through iterations of your UI, you'll find things to change in your data. If you're really passionate about UI/UX, then I don't think anybody would hold it against you being inclined to start there go for it! For me, starting at the data storage layer made sense. My thought is that a UI is just the paint on the house. So, I'm a software engineer of 20 years, but new to Java and open stack, generally, and just started a home inventory management project earlier this week.
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