On this day 3 years ago. I deployed my very first app

I asked one question in the code review and half the dev team went silent That is Jason's aukat. When I come into a room niggas run away @loyolaxavvierretard @Aypo129
Yeah. Most don’t really give a shit about coding. Just in it for the shekels. I mean there is nothing wrong with that. But I see so many Currycels treat Software Development like it’s an exam they just have to memorise for. Doesn’t work.
 
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I asked one question in the code review and half the dev team went silent That is Jason's aukat. When I come into a room niggas run away @loyolaxavvierretard @Aypo129
Bitches go silent when a real R1B1 Dravidian Chacha gives the veiny dihh:p
 
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Was scrolling through my old GitHub repos and found this Room Booking System I built for a college project in my 2nd year od unj. The requirement was just a basic CRUD site, but I don't do basic. Average is not in my dictionary. So I went overboard and added as much depth as possible to show up with one of the best projects

While most people did static room selection and saved simple booking details to the DB, I made mine dynamic. The available rooms showed up as animated cards, filtered by date, time, and room typeall pulled from the backend in real time. Everyone used MongoDB but I used ofc used SQL to flex.

Users could pick dates and see the bookings on that selected date and select from 30-minute slots like those zoom meetings, and the booked ones would grey out on the fly. I added OTP verification via automated emails and even synced bookings with calendar events using Microsoft Graph API. There was also a full admin panel with a calender in the center with all bookings closely displayed color coded based on room booked according to date where you could see everything and reschedule, cancel, and track every single action taken in the system in the history panel. Even added a room creation, deletion and editing button that would reflect dynamically on the main page

I didn’t want to stop at localhost either, so I used NGINX as a reverse proxy and hooked it all up to a domain through GoDaddy. Styled the UI with a cool PlayStation theme with Tailwind and made sure everything was secure with JWT authentication and parameterized queries for protection against SQL injection/XSS. All kinds of security features and configured it to use HTTPS with TLS 1.3. While all the niggas did theirs in html. I used all the modern frameworks react, vite, shard etc

Even had unit tests and proper logs in place for a full fledged website with everything in place

When I showed it to my professor, he was stunned. He said “Jason this isn't a college level project. This far surpasses it. You literally built a full-blown production ready mini platform in just three weeks as a 2nd year student. This is insane.” He ended up using it to manage his own meetings too. My website that I built is still being used by him 3 years after. You can see the booking made on June 19th.



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brutal overengineering for a college project, but good job regardless
 
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brutal overengineering for a college project, but good job regardless
Nah. This isn’t over engineering. Okay. It does seem like he may have gone overboard for a simple college project but on the surface the architectural and tech choices seem reasonable to me
 
ai will take yo job next year buddy
 

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