A simple finite state machine (FSM) with workflow character where you define your workflows in code.
In code it looks like:
public class HolidayApprovalWorkflow : WorkflowDefinitionBase
{
public override string Type => nameof(HolidayApprovalWorkflow);
public override List<Transition> Transitions
{
get
{
return new List<Transition>
{
new Transition {
State = "New",
Trigger = "Apply",
TargetState ="Applied",
CanMakeTransition = MeApplyingForHolidays
},
new Transition {
State = "Applied",
Trigger = "Approve",
TargetState ="Approved",
CanMakeTransition = BossIsApproving,
AfterTransition = ThankBossForApproving
},
new Transition {
State = "Applied",
Trigger = "Reject",
TargetState ="Rejected"
}
};
}
}
private bool MeApplyingForHolidays(TransitionContext context)
{
var holiday = context.GetInstance<Holiday>();
return holiday.Me == "Me";
}
private bool BossIsApproving(TransitionContext context)
{
var holiday = context.GetInstance<Holiday>();
return holiday.Boss == "NiceBoss";
}
private void ThankBossForApproving(TransitionContext context)
{
// SendMail("Thank you!!!");
}
}
Assuming you downloaded the sources and opened the directory with VS Code you should be good to go! Ahh and of course you need .NET Core and node.js installed on your development environment.
- Open the integrated terminal in VS Code and type
dotnet build
That ensures you are able to build the dotnet related stuff!
-
Hit F5 or go to the VS Code Debug tab (Ctrl+Shift+D) and run the WebApi project.
-
Once the project has started head over to your browser of choice and type in https://localhost:5001.
You should see now the login screen.
For developing purpose there exists a compound task named
dev:be-fe 🚀
that spins up the WebApi project with thedotnet watch run
command as well as the Angular based WebClient project with thenpm run start
command.
A web interface allows an administrator to search for workflow instances and have a look into the current state.
Happy poking!!