Design comparison
Solution retrospective
I'll add a link button next time
What specific areas of your project would you like help with?ill need help with measurements and units
Community feedback
- @MikDra1Posted 2 months ago
If you want to make your card responsive with ease you can use this technique:
.card { width: 90%; max-width: 37.5rem; }
On the smaller screens card will be 90% of the parent (here body), but as soon as the card will be 37.5rem (600px) it will lock with this size.
Also to put the card in the center I advise you to use this code snippet:
.container { display: grid; place-items: center; }
Hope you found this comment helpful 💗💗💗
Good job and keep going 😁😊😉
Marked as helpful0 - @StroudyPosted 2 months ago
Awesome job tackling this challenge! You’re doing amazing, and I wanted to share a couple of suggestions that might help refine your approach…
- I would put these into a
<ul> <li>
because it is a list of links and just seems more semantically correct.
<P class="same"><a href="=#">Github</a></P> <P class="same"><a href="#">Frontend Mentor</a></P> <P class="same"><a href="#">Linkedin</a></P> <P class="same"><a href="#">Twitter</a></P> <P class="same"><a href="#">Instagram</a></P>
-
Using
max-width: 100%
ormin-width: 100%
is more responsive than justwidth: 100%
because they allow elements to adjust better to different screen sizes. To learn more, check out this article: responsive-meaning. -
Developers should avoid using pixels (
px
) because they are a fixed size and don't scale well on different devices. Instead, userem
orem
, which are relative units that adjust based on user settings, making your design more flexible, responsive, and accessible. For more information check out this, Why font-size must NEVER be in pixels or this video by Kevin Powell CSS em and rem explained.- Another great resource for px to rem converter. -
Using
font-display: swap
in your@font-face
rule improves performance by showing fallback text until the custom font loads, preventing a blank screen (flash of invisible text). The downside is a brief flash when the font switches, but it’s usually better than waiting for text to appear.
You’re doing fantastic! I hope these tips help you as you continue your coding journey. Stay curious and keep experimenting—every challenge is an opportunity to learn. Have fun, and keep coding with confidence! 🌟
0@StroudyPosted 2 months ago@Tohir564, Hope you found it helpful, Will be looking out for your next solution.
0 - I would put these into a
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