This card represents the bulk of the work you will do on this project. If you get stuck on a problem for more than twenty minutes, ask for help. See the Resources section below for places to go for help.
While you are working on the interview, create issues as they arise. Some examples:
A question needs to be revised.
The interview logic is broken.
The PDF formatting needs to be changed.
You need to add a document to the interview.
And so on.
Requirements
After you meet with the decisionmaker, add the requirements the checklists below. The examples below apply to most interviews, but are not a complete list. The interview you are building will probably have additional requirements. Add or remove requirements as necessary.
Basic Functionality
[x] The interview does not generate any errors.
[ ] The interview metadata generates an accurate card for CourtFormsOnline.
[ ] The interview repository's README.md includes the jurisdiction and documents assembled.
[x] The interview replicates the existing Guide & File interview as closely as possible.
[x] The interview contains an up-to-date military affidavit.
[ ] The interview calculates the filing fee and offers the option to complete an affidavit of indigency.
[x] The completed documents can be downloaded.
[ ] The interview assembles the following documents:
[ ] Statement of Small Claim
[ ] Affidavit of Indigency
User Experience
[x] The interview questions are readable at a 6th-grade level, with exceptions approved by the decisionmaker.
[x] The interview does not ask unnecessary questions.
[ ] The interview generates a what to do next page/document.
E-Filing
[ ] The assembled documents can be e-filed with the court.
You can ask for help in the Document Assembly Line's Coding Help channel in Microsoft Teams. (Contact @samglover if you need an invitation to the Document Assembly Line team.)
The LIT Lab hosts a weekly community check-ins for interview builders on Mondays at 10 am Eastern. (Contact @samglover if you need the Zoom link.)
This card represents the bulk of the work you will do on this project. If you get stuck on a problem for more than twenty minutes, ask for help. See the Resources section below for places to go for help.
While you are working on the interview, create issues as they arise. Some examples:
And so on.
Requirements
After you meet with the decisionmaker, add the requirements the checklists below. The examples below apply to most interviews, but are not a complete list. The interview you are building will probably have additional requirements. Add or remove requirements as necessary.
Basic Functionality
User Experience
E-Filing
Documentation
Resources