Difference between revisions of "Courses/single-page-portfolio"

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== Adding your content ==
== Adding your content ==


=== Adding sections ===
Your page will consist of several sections, so let's start by adding three of these to your body. Because we want to give them all a different background, we need a way to identify them. To do this, we'll be giving them classes. To test, we'll also be adding a little content to the sections.
Your page will consist of several sections, so let's start by adding three of these to your body. Because we want to give them all a different background, we need a way to identify them. To do this, we'll be giving them classes. To test, we'll also be adding a little content to the sections.


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</source>
</source>


=== The main content ===
=== styling the sections ===
Let's start adding some content. Your site will consist of several [http://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_section.asp sections], inside every section there is an [http://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_article.asp article] that contains an [http://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_image.asp image] and a [http://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_div.asp div] with some text. The section allows us to change the background color for the whole area, the article keeps everything together and allows us to place it in the center of the screen. Of course, all of this is placed in the body of your HTML file.
Open your CSS file in TextWrangler and delete the contents. First we are going to give all sections a '''relative position'''. This means that they will be placed in their natural order in the document. We're also giving them a '''width and height of 100%''', so that they fill the screen.
 
<source lang="html5">


<source lang="css">
section{
  position:relative;
  height: 100%;
  width:100%;
}
</source>
</source>

Revision as of 12:09, 19 June 2015

Getting a headstart

To get a headstart and leave everybody in the dust, follow the HTML & CSS courses on Codecademy [1] first.

Preparing your folder and our files

The first thing you have to understand is that everything that we'll be writing is basically plain text. This means that your entire website basically consists of text files that are written in a specific way. You could even use a very basic text editor like textedit or notepad. However, programs that are specifically made for writing code often have handy features. Therefore, it's better to use a program like textwranglet, that gives you a few handy code editing features.

First, you should create a folder in which you'll be keeping all of your files. Call it whatever you like. After this, you open TextWrangler. Write anything you like and then save it as index.html in the folder you just created. Now find this file in finder and open it with a browser, preferable Chrome. You just created a website! But to give it structure and make it look good, we'll need to write some html. Erase your previous text and proceed with the next step: creating the basic html structure.

Doctype, html, head and body

Open your index.html again in TextWrangler. Start by declaring the doctype on the first line. This tells the browser that the document will be written in HTML. After this, it's always smart to immediately write all the necessary tags you always need for an HTML document. This includes the html tag, but also the head and the body. In the head you will include information for the browser, like the document title and links to stylesheets and javascript files. In the body you place the html that people will really see.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>

  <head>
    <title>My title</title>
  </head>

  <body>
    My content
  </body>

</html>


Adding a CSS file

Now we want to style our content. To do this, we first have to add a link to a stylesheet in the head of index.html like so:

  <head>
    <title>My title</title>
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css">
  </head>

You can see that we are linking to "style.css", so this is the file we will have to create. Open a new file in TextWrangler and add the following text:

  body{
    background: red;
  }

This makes the background of our site red, just to see if it works. Save this file as "style.css" and save it in your folder. If you open index.html in your browser again, you should see that the background is now red.


Adding your content

Adding sections

Your page will consist of several sections, so let's start by adding three of these to your body. Because we want to give them all a different background, we need a way to identify them. To do this, we'll be giving them classes. To test, we'll also be adding a little content to the sections.

<section class="section1">these</section>
<section class="section2">are</section>
<section class="section3">sections</section>

styling the sections

Open your CSS file in TextWrangler and delete the contents. First we are going to give all sections a relative position. This means that they will be placed in their natural order in the document. We're also giving them a width and height of 100%, so that they fill the screen.

section{
  position:relative;
  height: 100%;
  width:100%;		
}