I’ll explain my decisions about how I designed MTG Deck Builder. Making an app like MDB instead of a to-do list app would also help my JavaScript knowledge grow, because MDB has extra functionalities I’d need to learn how to program that a basic to-do list wouldn’t have. Even for people who know nothing about Magic: The Gathering, they can still look at the cards’ pretty pictures that the app shows. Instead, I decided to make an app that ultimately became MDB, which is at least more interesting to use than a to-do list app. There are already so many to-do list apps that I could make an app that lists all to-do list apps. Once I had decided to start educating myself on Vue.js, I browsed through a bunch of online tutorials on it, and I noticed most of them taught how to make an app that makes to-do lists. The reason I created MTG Deck Builder-“ MDB” as I’ll abbreviate the name here-was primarily for my sake of learning and dabbling with Vue.js, which is a JavaScript framework that the app has been built on. (It took me a while to make just the manual! Sometimes I wonder if writing it was even worth my time, especially because I think I’ve made the app easy enough to use that having the manual might be superfluous.) Why I Made This Need help? Be sure to check the user manual, available directly in the app. Tip for newbies: If you don’t know of any Magic cards but you want to try adding one to a deck, enter the code “ #random” as the name in the card adder, and that’ll put in a randomly chosen card.
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