Description
In the second year of the Pharmacy program at Ferris State University, it became clear that comparing and contrasting drugs and disease states was very important. Flash cards served adequately for studying the material, but something more dynamic was necessary. A possible solution was to write a webpage using HTML, JavaScript, and CSS to serve as a study aid. The webpage allows for searching for a common property and being able to view all items with that shared property and the rest of their properties to compare and contrast. Manually updating the code to the webpage would often result in syntax errors that would break the webpage until resolved manually. As a solution to minimize syntax errors, a program written in the language AutoHotKey could be used to systematically update the webpage.