Design comparison
Solution retrospective
I feel so good for having created my own little website just with the knowledge I acquired in just a few days. I don't know if I'm doing everything well but, I'm here to learn more every single day.
Community feedback
- @correlucasPosted about 2 years ago
👾Hello @MikeyRG127, Congratulations on completing this challenge!
Your solution its almost done and I’ve some tips to help you to improve it:
Using
<picture>
you’ve more control over the elements and its better than using the product image as<img>
orbackground-image
. Look that for SEO and search engine reasons it isn't a better practice to import this product image with CSS since this will make it harder to the image. You can manage both images inside the<picture>
tag and use the html to code to set when the images should change setting the devicemax-width
depending of the device (phone / computer) Here’s a guide about how to usepicture
:https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_picture.asp
See the example below:
<picture> <source media="(max-width:650px)" srcset="./images/image-product-mobile.jpg"> <img src="./images/image-product-desktop.jpg" alt="Gabrielle Parfum" style="width:auto;"> </picture>
✌️ I hope this helps you and happy coding!
Marked as helpful0@MikeyRG127Posted about 2 years ago@correlucas Thank you my man!, I appreciate it.
0 - @faha1999Posted about 2 years ago
Hello, Jose Rodriguez (Mikey) Congratulations on finishing this project. It's lovely and great on the whole! Just a little tip:
- You might want to use semantic tags like the
<main>
to wrap your code, instead ofdiv
. like
<main class="product-container"> </main>
This would help improve accessibility.
-
add
alt="image-product-desktop"
attribute inimg
. This would help improve accessibility. -
add the below styles to the
body
. It will center everything
body { justify-content: center; align-items: center; display: flex; min-height: 100vh; flex-direction: column; /* padding-top: 110px;*/ background-color: hsl(30, 38%, 92%); }
- media issue
@media only screen and (max-width: 430px){ .product-container { max-width: 350px; } .image-container { border-radius: 10px 0px 0px 10px; background: url(images/image-product-mobile.jpg); } }
-
use modern CSS reset
https://piccalil.li/blog/a-modern-css-reset/
I hope it will work. Happy coding.
Marked as helpful0 - You might want to use semantic tags like the
- @AdrianoEscarabotePosted about 2 years ago
Hi Jose Rodriguez (Mikey), how are you?
I really liked the result of your project, but I have some tips that I think you will like:
1- Every page should have one main landmark
<main>
. So replace the div that wraps the whole content with<main>
to improve the accessibility. click here2- All page content should be contained by landmarks, you can understand better by clicking here: click here
We have to make sure that all content is contained in a reference region, designated with HTML5 reference elements or ARIA reference regions.
Example:
native HTML5 reference elements:
<body> <header>This is the header</header> <nav>This is the nav</nav> <main>This is the main</main> <footer>This is the footer</footer> </body>
ARIA best practices call for using native HTML5 reference elements instead of ARIA functions whenever possible, but the markup in the following example works:
<body> <div role="banner">This is the header</div> <div role="navigation">This is the nav</div> <div role="main">This is the main</div> <div role="contentinfo">This is the footer</div> </body>
It is a best practice to contain all content, except skip links, in distinct regions such as header, navigation, main, and footer.
Link to read more about: click here
2- Why it Matters
Navigating the web page is far simpler for screen reader users if all of the content splits between one or more high-level sections. Content outside of these sections is difficult to find, and its purpose may be unclear.
HTML has historically lacked some key semantic markers, such as the ability to designate sections of the page as the header, navigation, main content, and footer. Using both HTML5 elements and ARIA landmarks in the same element is considered a best practice, but the future will favor HTML regions as browser support increases.
Rule Description
It is a best practice to ensure that there is only one main landmark to navigate to the primary content of the page and that if the page contains iframe elements, each should either contain no landmarks, or just a single landmark.
Link to read more about: click here
Prefer to use
rem
overpx
to have your page working better across browsers and resizing the elements properlyThe rest is great!!
Hope it helps...👍
0
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