- Updated the CallWindow component to include connection quality states and reconnection attempts, improving user experience during calls. - Enhanced the ChatWindow to allow starting audio and video calls in a new window, providing users with more flexibility. - Integrated accelerometer and gyroscope data collection in the RegistroPonto component, enabling validation of point registration authenticity. - Improved error handling and user feedback for sensor permissions and data validation, ensuring a smoother registration process. - Updated backend logic to validate sensor data and adjust confidence scores for point registration, enhancing security against spoofing.
Welcome to your Convex functions directory!
Write your Convex functions here. See https://docs.convex.dev/functions for more.
A query function that takes two arguments looks like:
// functions.js
import { query } from "./_generated/server";
import { v } from "convex/values";
export const myQueryFunction = query({
// Validators for arguments.
args: {
first: v.number(),
second: v.string(),
},
// Function implementation.
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
// Read the database as many times as you need here.
// See https://docs.convex.dev/database/reading-data.
const documents = await ctx.db.query("tablename").collect();
// Arguments passed from the client are properties of the args object.
console.log(args.first, args.second);
// Write arbitrary JavaScript here: filter, aggregate, build derived data,
// remove non-public properties, or create new objects.
return documents;
},
});
Using this query function in a React component looks like:
const data = useQuery(api.functions.myQueryFunction, {
first: 10,
second: "hello",
});
A mutation function looks like:
// functions.js
import { mutation } from "./_generated/server";
import { v } from "convex/values";
export const myMutationFunction = mutation({
// Validators for arguments.
args: {
first: v.string(),
second: v.string(),
},
// Function implementation.
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
// Insert or modify documents in the database here.
// Mutations can also read from the database like queries.
// See https://docs.convex.dev/database/writing-data.
const message = { body: args.first, author: args.second };
const id = await ctx.db.insert("messages", message);
// Optionally, return a value from your mutation.
return await ctx.db.get(id);
},
});
Using this mutation function in a React component looks like:
const mutation = useMutation(api.functions.myMutationFunction);
function handleButtonPress() {
// fire and forget, the most common way to use mutations
mutation({ first: "Hello!", second: "me" });
// OR
// use the result once the mutation has completed
mutation({ first: "Hello!", second: "me" }).then((result) =>
console.log(result),
);
}
Use the Convex CLI to push your functions to a deployment. See everything
the Convex CLI can do by running npx convex -h in your project root
directory. To learn more, launch the docs with npx convex docs.