Interface intuitive

 

select a partner and share one of the repl.it workspaces between the two of you. Additionally, you will need to have a design document where you have the specifications of your application. This could either be a text document that lives in your repl.it workspace or you could use another collaborate platform such as Google Docs or a Microsoft Word shared document.
You will be creating a calendar that displays the current month using a graphical interface. The design and layout of the calendar will be left to you and your team.
The calendar should be able to read from a file to get events. The events themselves may be too long to display on the calendar so you need a way to let users know there is an event on a given day.
If a user selects a day, they should be able to see the events for that day listed out.
Design Document
Create a document that sketches a visual of how your calendar will look. Where will you display the following:
• Month Name
• Week Days
• Calendar Dates
• Dates that have events
• Extra information if a date is selected
Design Questions
• Is there a way to see which date is selected?
• Does the information display on the main calendar or in a new window?
• How do I manage multiple events in a date
• Is my interface intuitive?
o Can someone figure out how to use this calendar without a lot of explanation?
Event File
You will need to have a file in the same folder as your Calendar.py that has a listing of events. You and your team will need to decide how to store information in this file.
• What is the format of info in the file?
o 3 Dentist Appt
o 3:Dentist Appt
• What happens if there are multiple events on a given day?
o 3,Dentist Appt,Skydiving Lessons
o 3#Dentist Appt\nSkydiving Lessons
Problem Deconstruction
What functions will you use in your program? How will using these functions help to simplify the overall design? Who is in charge of each function (if working with a partner)?

Sample Solution

Martin struggles to find a way to be meaningful to his wife without controlling her. Much of Martin’s speech, including the aforementioned quote comes in the form of long lecture-like monologues that depict him as relatively egotistical–impossibly consumed in the confusion of finding his own identity, but still demanding that Victoria find hers. David Waterman also insists that the characters in the second act are free of social control, however noting that “for all of their apparent freedom to perform their genders as they see fit, the characters in Act Two are obviously not emancipated from the matrix of power and its normative, regulatory function of maintaining social control” (91). While in Act I, Victoria is forced into an ultimate submission, in Act II, Victoria faces a new sort of constraint. She is no longer a dummy, but the nature of her relationship with Martin is restricting in a different, far more subtle manner. Martin, although to all intents and purposes is evidently in favor of Victoria’s liberation, manages to exert control by making her feel guilty for not responding positively to his attempts to satisfy her sexually. Only through a homosexual relationship with Lin can Victoria find a balance between love and liberation.

It is obvious that Act II is a significant improvement in terms of the freedom and independence the characters experience. However, there are still rather subdued indications of an underlying influence of the earlier instituted Victorian social standards. The most obvious exhibition of the continued effects we suffer under is the drastic distinction instituted between the male and female gender, and the specific traits attributed to them each. While the characters attempt to overpower the characteristics that have always been assigned to their gender, there are still specific obdurate characteristics that they continue to assign to the subsequent gender. Females are still associated with delicate frocks, playing with dolls, and caring motherhood, while males are connected with violence, force, and control. It may prove to be difficult to completely dissociate ourselves from the institutions we have so long internalised, as there has never been a time when our society had retained neutral connotations associated to the individualised genders. One must wonder how or even if our society will ever transcend beyond the restrictions of such classifications.

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