Digitalisation of Housing in Nepal : Full Stack JavaScript Application
Atreya, Kushal (2020)
Atreya, Kushal
2020
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:amk-202005138789
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:amk-202005138789
Tiivistelmä
Yarshaa DHN (Digital Housing Nepal) is a web-based start-up project which allows users to search, sell, and reserve the apartment. The traditional rental methodology is still practised in Nepal, where landlord and tenant meet with a local means of advertisement, personal contacts, and or word of mouth. This practise quantifies the time, effort, and resources for both hands and is arduous to get the proper match. Yarshaa DHN solves the complication by renting, featuring the rentals for the landlords, and by providing a visual dash-board platform for the tenants who can search the right apartment with the search and sort parameters such as location, size and facilities, from the web-based application.
Data were collected from primary and secondary sources. A survey was performed in Kathmandu where 76 people were participating by filling the form with a few questions. Among them, 12 were potential landlords and 64 were potential tenants. Furthermore, research-based findings and information from the Internet and publication were utilized. The waterfall methodology was implemented to develop the application, which consists of analysis, design, development, and testing phases, respectively. Modern web development tools, such as HTML5, CSS, Bootstraps, JavaScript, React, React router, Redux, Express and MongoDB, were extensively used to make the prototype responsive, modern, and interactive.
A full-fledged modern web-based prototype was developed (keeping the outcome of survey and business perspective coherent) to demonstrate what could be the face of change.
Data were collected from primary and secondary sources. A survey was performed in Kathmandu where 76 people were participating by filling the form with a few questions. Among them, 12 were potential landlords and 64 were potential tenants. Furthermore, research-based findings and information from the Internet and publication were utilized. The waterfall methodology was implemented to develop the application, which consists of analysis, design, development, and testing phases, respectively. Modern web development tools, such as HTML5, CSS, Bootstraps, JavaScript, React, React router, Redux, Express and MongoDB, were extensively used to make the prototype responsive, modern, and interactive.
A full-fledged modern web-based prototype was developed (keeping the outcome of survey and business perspective coherent) to demonstrate what could be the face of change.