DineSafely displays Toronto Public Health’s food safety inspections for all establishments that serve and prepare food. Each inspection results in either a pass, a conditional pass, or a closed notice. The data is sourced from the City of Toronto's Open Data Portal.
More about Toronto Public Health’s food safety program DineSafe
Follow these steps to open this sample in a container using the VS Code Dev Containers extension:
-
If this is your first time using a development container, please ensure your system meets the pre-reqs (i.e. have Docker installed) in the getting started steps.
-
To use this repository, you can either open the repository in an isolated Docker volume:
- If you already have VS Code and Docker installed, you can click the badge above to get started. Clicking the badge will cause VS Code to automatically install the Dev Containers extension if needed, clone the source code into a container volume, and spin up a dev container for use.
Note: Under the hood, this will use the Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume... command to clone the source code in a Docker volume instead of the local filesystem. Volumes are the preferred mechanism for persisting container data.
Or open a locally cloned copy of the code:
- Clone this repository to your local filesystem.
- Press F1 and select the Dev Containers: Open Folder in Container... command.
- Select the cloned copy of this folder, wait for the container to start, and try things out!
- If you already have VS Code and Docker installed, you can click the badge above to get started. Clicking the badge will cause VS Code to automatically install the Dev Containers extension if needed, clone the source code into a container volume, and spin up a dev container for use.