I am currently question banned, and after talking to several people it seems that mods are suggesting I try to make this question (https://stackoverflow.com/questions/57531632/direction-on-creating-a-workflow-driven-app-for-an-hoa-home-owners-association) follow the SO guidelines/rules.
I have two other questions that are similar but the earlier ones don't contain as much detail, so I deleted them and started over. Because I didn't know the site rules.
tldr: Is there a workflow engine or a means for dealing with a request status/tracking history, without throwing a lot of custom code at the problem?
In order to provide some background about what I've thought so far, on the db side, I could create a Requests table to house requests. Create another Statuses table to provide a lookup for status (Approved, Denied, etc.). Create another table to hold ConversationHistory. Another to hold Attachments/images and point to a file directory (most likely as opposed to storing attachment as base 64 encoded in the db). That's high level. On the C# side, create REST API services to create, read, update, delete requests. We'd also need a db table for request type (e.g., shed, siding change, siding color change, architectural/addition, etc. per the request form below).
On the front end, we'd need a dashboard to show requests that need your attention - once a request has been submitted, it needs to be reviewed by ACC members for example. There'd be some indicator/chart/widget to show requests that have been approved, denied, approved with conditions, or those with questions, with links to each. The main need for the dashboard would be to notify users that they need to perform some action. The site would track history most especially and allow the users to see what's been done at a glance without wading through countless emails.
The Angular pages would be simple forms I think - to allow the homeowner/requestor to enter details like name, address, request type, add attachments/images. The ACC members would just be able to add comments to the request and choose a status, like approved, etc. I would think the site would need to keep a log of activity, so that would necessitate another db table for ActivityLog or something like that. REST service calls would be made as needed in a transaction to ensure everything passed/failed. Update pages would be role-based to allow only the original requestor to make changes to certain fields like the attachments, or description of the request. A comment section for the ACC members would probably not be in an update page but more like a view page with the ability add to a running log of what's going on with the request. I'd visualize the ability to delete/update the comments only by the user making the addition. Of course, only ACC members could update the status. The homeowner would of course also be allowed to delete their request. Email notifications would need to occur on request change.
This sounds like a tool like Gemini that I've used in the past, I believe an open source issue tracker. Or maybe like a Jira tool. But specifically for ACC changes. Basically, this site would allow a homeowner as well as ACC members and the property management company to track these requests like we've never been able to do previously. Does that provide adequate details and background? This seems like a lot of custom code and a lot of work, and the question is whether this seems reasonable, or is there an easier way?
I just came up with another process improvement as I'm thinking about this more. Instead of having to manually go to surrounding neighbor's homes, the site would notify adjacent neighbors via email/text (based on their site notification preferences) for required signatures. They'd click the site request link in their text/email for them to electronically sign let's say. That'd clean up the process even more and reduce legwork and actually being able to actually track down neighbors that aren't at home or on vacation or difficult to locate. This would eliminate the (um, ridiculous!) need to send out certified mail to a neighbor you can't contact or one who refuses to sign the notification form.
The domain context:
I've researched creating a free web app for our local HOA ACC (Architectural Control Committee) changes for over two hours and was looking for some direction. Standard C#/SQL Server on the backend with Angular 8 on the front end. I think I'm looking for a workflow type of engine to accomplish what this app needs to do, but not sure it exists. I'm familiar with Microsoft's workflows like Windows Workflow Foundation, SharePoint workflows and most recently, Durable Functions in Azure. WF looks dated and difficult to learn, especially for an off-the-clock freebie app. SharePoint is definitely out based on the environment and Durable Functions Azure functions seem to be possibly an option for creating microservice workflows. I'm not sure if they're indefinitely totally free for low volume on a month to month basis as long as it's less than 1,000,000 executions and 400,000 GB/s due to the free grant. That might help if we could use Durable Functions to manage a simple workflow with serverless functions that are very granular and focused on using maybe a queue and table storage. Any feedback there would be appreciated. I'm new to Azure functions.
I'm not looking for a property management software like Yardi, or an HOA software system. I'm looking specifically for something that allows us to manage homeowner changes per the page here. The only thing I found that's close to what I'm looking for is here, and it seems to be for properties in Texas. I'm not sure if it's a custom solution or an off the shelf package, but it looks like it supports at least the functionality I'm needing at a high level.
We currently have a very painful manual request system in place. Homeowner has a change like building a deck, changing their siding or replacing a roof and the HOA covenants require them to email the change after filling out the aforementioned form. The ACC committee reviews the submission, physically meets to discuss the changes, then approves, approves with conditions or denies the request. If it gets denied or has an administrative denial pending updates, it goes back to the homeowner for updates. They can then make the required updates to the request and run it back up the flagpole by emailing it to the ACC again and the ACC approves/denies once again. Rinse and repeat. If it's approved the homeowner is notified this is the case and they can proceed with their changes. The current process is painful and in an email thread rather than being in some sort of issue tracker that records conversation threads, details and updates. The ACC also misses emails, and they miss request details a lot. It would be nice if we could manage this process better. That's where I think some sort of workflow engine could be very helpful. There seems to be a lot of HOA software out there but haven't found one to manage this process. I'm not sure if it would just require a state-based database entry and simplify the request down to states like submitted, approved, approved with conditions, denied or request additional information. And lots of custom code. The thing is, it would need to email the parties to notify them of actions that have occurred with the request and to check the site to provide more updates. I would think it should have a dashboard to provide a way to see the user action items and maybe graphical eye candy to reflect needs, accomplishments, waiting on somebody else or something like that. Any ideas would be appreciated. I'm just getting thoughts in mind on how best to proceed. Thanks in advance...
I feel like this question is so far removed from the rules, and it's no longer applicable I'm not sure why you're kind of forcing me to undelete it.
I no longer intend to work on this project, so the question is now irrelevant, so I'd prefer you just remove it and the other two before it.
I think it was Rene who suggested it might be a good fit for the Software Engineering site, but looking for suggestions in how to best proceed.
I have two other questions that are similar but the earlier ones don't contain as much detail
as stated in the OP. They're similar but the reason I deleted them was because I thought I'd just start over and make a flailing and really bad attempt to conform but because I hadn't read the rules, it didn't matter.