QR Code component with REMs and no media queries.
Design comparison
Solution retrospective
Here is my solution for this challenge!
All feedback is wellcome, specially with my css, I struggled a little bit trying to center the component without using position absolute and only with flex, but idk if is a good practice or there is a better way.
Greetings coders!
Community feedback
- @correlucasPosted about 2 years ago
👾Hi @Strocs, congratulations on your first solution!👋 Welcome to the Frontend Mentor Coding Community!
Great solution and a great start! From what I saw you’re on the right track. I’ve few suggestions for you that you can consider adding to your code:
1.Reduce your code by removing unnecessary elements. The HTML structure is working but you can reduce at least 20% of your code by cleaning the unnecessary elements, you start cleaning it by removing some unnecessary
<div>
. For this solution you wrap everything inside a single block of content using<div>
or<main>
(better option for accessibility) and put inside the whole content<img>
/<h1>
and<p>
.<body> <main> <img src="./images/image-qr-code.png" alt="QR Code Frontend Mentor" > <h1>Improve your front-end skills by building projects</h1> <p>Scan the QR code to visit Frontend Mentor and take your coding skills to the next level</p> </main> </body>
2.Use a CSS reset to avoid all the problems you can have with the default CSS setup, removing all margins, and making the images easier to work, see the article below where you can copy and paste this CSS code cheatsheet: https://piccalil.li/blog/a-modern-css-reset/
✌️ I hope this helps you and happy coding!
Marked as helpful0 - @AdrianoEscarabotePosted about 2 years ago
Hi Ignacio Andrés Molina, how are you?
I really liked the result of your project, but I have some tips that I think you will like:
1- 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
Please log in to post a comment
Log in with GitHubJoin our Discord community
Join thousands of Frontend Mentor community members taking the challenges, sharing resources, helping each other, and chatting about all things front-end!
Join our Discord