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Assignment "TicketSeller"
Due Week 8 and worth 150 points
This assignment contains elements that you have learned over the past few weeks,
including:
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Designing well-written and readable programs using a disciplined coding style, including documentation and
indentation standards.
Demonstrating how to implement logic involving sequence, selection, and repetition using Visual Basic.
Creating useful and well-designed programs that use subroutines, functions, menus, dialog boxes, and other related
form objects to solve practical business problems.
This assignment will contain two (2) Parts: Event Planning Document and Coding phase. You
must submit both parts as separate files for the completion of this assignment. Remember, you
are only to demonstrate the menu function and not create a major database to track sales.
TicketSeller is a new startup ticketing company. It has contracted you to develop a Visual Basic
system to sell and print tickets for your local basketball arena. The system will provide sales in a
Microsoft Windows environment at the ticket office. Management will use your program as a
prototype for a future global ticket system. Create your own sample data for the designs. Use
your creativity in this design.
Every software project can be broken down to two parts. The first is the screen design. It
includes the graphical screen layout and how each object reacts when it is triggered. A simple
example is an exit button. The graphical design will consist of a red button with the word “exit”.
The event planning document will define the name of the button, how is it invoked, and the
action that occurs. (See Part I below). For this part of the assignment, you will turn in an event
planning document created in Word.
The second part is the coding phase (see Part II below). This is the actual Visual Basic code to
complete the actions defined in the event planning document. For this part of the assignment,
you will turn in six (6) screen shots and a copy of all the code created to implement this ticket
system. Remember, you are only to demonstrate the menu function and not create a major
database to track sales.
Part I: Event Planning Document
The event planning document consists of a table that defines the actions for a specific object
used on the Visual Basic form. This is an important component to complete before you start
building the application for TicketSeller, because it provides a plan on how to implement your
application. For example, if you have two (2) ticket prices, the event planning document will tell
you to use a list box that displays two (2) ticket prices ($25 for upper level seats and $50 for
lower level seats).
1. Create an event planning document in which you input the information pertaining to your
application including the following:
a. The object
b. The event trigger
c. The event process:
For this assignment, an example may be necessary. Please see the sample below and refer to
Figure 3-68 on page 158 of the textbook for further example.
Progam name: Ticketpgm | Object | btnExit - Developer: Joe Smith | Event Trigger |
Click - Object: frmMainMenu | Event process | Close the window
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
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Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides. Check with
your professor for any additional instructions.
Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course
title, and the date.
Part II: Coding Phase
You must submit the following for the completion of Part 2 of this assignment.
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A total of six (6) screen shots, one (1) for each screen including setup screen menu, main menu, sell screen, report
screen menu, daily report screen, and weekly report screen.
The Visual Basic code for the entire subsystem.
The next step in the process is to take the design you created in the last phase and implement it
into Visual Basic. First create the forms and drop the objects to the form. Next write the code
behind the scenes to create the menus. Remember, you are only to demonstrate the menu
function and not create a major database to track sales.
2. Create a Windows application to demonstrate the menu flow.
a. Create a main menu system for the:
i. setup game / ticket menu.
ii. sell tickets menu.
iii. reporting menu.
b. Create a setup subsystem to enter:
i. games.
ii. dates.
iii. prices.
iv. seats.
c. Create a sell subsystem to:
i. display available tickets.
ii. sell tickets and take them out of the available ticket pool.
iii.
iv.
keep track of the total sales.
provide a group discount (10 or more tickets for 1 transaction – 10% off).
d. Business requires two (2) new screen reports to be generated from the ticketing system. The
first screen report shows the daily activity, which shows the number of tickets sold and revenue
generated. The second screen report is weekly results. It has the total tickets sold, the total
revenue generated, and tickets available for sale. Create a report subsystem for daily and
weekly sales.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
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Apply graphical user interface design principles.
Design conditional and iteration constructs appropriate to a given programming task.
Design well-written and readable programs using a disciplined coding style, including documentation and
indentation standards.
Create Visual Basic applications that deploy on multiple platforms such as Web pages, Windows, and Office
environments.
Demonstrate how to implement logic involving sequence, selection, and repetition using Visual Basic.
Create useful and well-designed programs that use subroutines, functions, menus, dialog boxes, and other related
form objects to solve practical business problems.
Grading for this assignment will be based on answer quality, logic / organization of the paper,
and language and writing skills, using the following rubric can be found here.