Latest solutions
Newsletter | Next.js (App Dir) | Tailwind | TypeScript | Framer-Motion
#next#tailwind-css#typescript#framer-motionSubmitted over 1 year agoAge calculator app | Next.js(App Router) | TypeScript | Tailwind
#next#typescript#tailwind-cssSubmitted almost 2 years agoResponsive QR Code Component | React | Tailwind | Vite
#react#tailwind-css#viteSubmitted over 2 years ago
Latest comments
- @DevMedic11Submitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Welcome to the platform! 🎉 We're thrilled to have you here and excited to see your progress 💪as you continue your front-end development journey.
Your solution looks nice on larger screens :)
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On smaller screens you may want to increase the size of the card.
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The language of the document is missing. Identifying the language of the page or page elements allows screen readers to read the content in the appropriate language. It also facilitates automatic translation of content.
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Image alternative text is not present. Each image must have an alt attribute. Without alternative text, the content of an image will not be available to screen reader users or when the image is unavailable. These might look very frivolous but these are accessibility issues.
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project(which you did). Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures and get answers to your questions! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
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- @muradalimirzoyevSubmitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Welcome to the platform! 🎉 We're thrilled to have you here and excited to see your progress 💪as you continue your front-end development journey.
Nice attempt:)
- To make it mobile responsive it is important to first understand how different breakpoints work with the media queries, which breakpoints to target, how to apply different styling to the same element at different breakpoints etc.
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project. Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
Marked as helpful0 - @ailenglassmamSubmitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Nice attempt :)
I totally understand the amount of effort it takes to build this kind of project.
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Looks like it does calculate invalid dates like 31/2 & 31/6 and does not throw validation error.
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Feel free to study my solution to get some ideas about the JS validation.
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I also wrote an article on this project and explained everything in a simple way.
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project(which you did). Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
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- @Navi003Submitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Nice attempt :)
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Image alternative text is not present for
icon-success.svg
This might look very frivolous but this is an accessibility issue. Each image must have an alt attribute. Without alternative text, the content of an image will not be available to screen reader users or when the image is unavailable. -
The Thank you page is not centered for 460px and down screens.
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The error messages & red input border does not reset after hitting Dismiss message.
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Feel free to go study my solution to get some ideas about the structure, styling and the JS validation.
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project(which you did). Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
Marked as helpful1 -
- @GH0STH4CKERSubmitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Nice attempt :)
I totally understand the amount of effort it takes to build this kind of project.
- Feel free to go study my solution to get some ideas about the structure, styling and the JS validation.
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project(which you did). Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
Marked as helpful1 - @imkarvendhanSubmitted over 1 year ago@itushPosted over 1 year ago
Congratulations on completing the challenge! 🎉
Your solution looks nice to me :)
In my projects:
- I always start with mobile-first workflow.
- I use at least one main element for a page (entire content goes into the main, if I'm not using header & footer), and avoid divs as much as possible and use section and article element wherever I can.
<body> <main> All content </main> </body>
-
I Use relative units as much as possible and avoid absolute units whenever possible.
-
If you are someone who is just starting out with front-end development, I strongly suggest starting with the QR code component project(which you did). Also in the challenges page you may filter by (Newbie, HTML&CSS) sort by (easier first) to select projects that will help you solidify your foundation. To avoid any potential knowledge gap⚠️ please first solidify HTML, CSS, JS fundamentals, make few projects only with the trio and then move on to any framework or library.
-
I remember when I started out, I made countless mistakes and spent long hours searching for solutions. But hey, you don't need to go through the same struggles! 🙌 To help you shorten the learning curve, I recommend going through the following articles. They contain valuable insights that can make your journey smoother:
📚🔍 12 important CSS topics where I discuss about css position, z-index, box-model, flexbox, grid, media queries, mobile-first workflow, best practices etc. in a simple way.
📚🔍 11 important HTML topics where I discuss about my thought process and approach to convert a design/mock-up to HTML along with important topics like block and inline elements, HTML Semantic Elements, accessibility.
I hope you find these resources somewhat helpful in your coding adventures! 🤞
I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing the amazing projects you'll create in the future! 🚀💻
Keep up the fantastic work and happy hacking! 💪✨
Feel free to ask more questions☺️
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