BiBot made me get serious about learning to code, which is how I ended up looking up coding bootcamps. A few years ago, I came up with the concept of BiBot during a course I was taking on Artificial Intelligence (AI). The work presented a premise that presented a bot that provided resources for Bisexuals living in the United States. My coding classes helped me learn how to make the bot look attractive. However, as a newbie coder, my work used open-source code that I found on YouTube to make the JavaScript section. I knew I wanted my bot to talk because if the bot was the only “person” the human was interacting with and being honest with, I wanted them to be friendly and kind to the person on the other end of the screen. Right now, the BiBot only knows specific inputs that the user copies and pastes. In time I would like Bibot to be more intelligent and able to parse together meanings. However, this was a start to a premise presented in my paper.
Chat with BiBot for LGBTQ+ resourcesIn SheCodes Plus I continued my coding journey. I learned more about HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and Visual Studio. However, I also learned about making API calls, using Bootstrap, hosting websites, and working on GitHub. My final project was this weather app. If you want to know the weather in your area press the red thumb tack at the top of the page.
Launch my weather appHere is the first website I coded. I coded it for SheCodes basics. It is a three week coding camp where I learned the basics of HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and Visual Studio Code software. At the end of the three weeks each student made a website on something they had an interest in. I chose Pac-Man. It has always been one of my favorite video games. I doodled him all over my text books in middle school.
Visit my Pac-Man page