- I wanted to make the best possible start to my EdX course, in particular learning GIT best practice.
- I built this project to learn basic IT team working skills.
- I have never been able to get professional feedback on my front end skills and this project has helped me gain confidence.
- I learned solving GIT and GIThub challenges, writing a ReadMe file, using Markdown and some tips and tricks for refactoring, spotting where code can be reduced by consolidation.
AS A marketing agency
I WANT a codebase that follows accessibility standards
SO THAT our own site is optimized for search engines
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Semantic HTML elements can be found throughout the source code
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HTML elements follow a logical structure independent of styling and positioning
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Image and icon elements contain accessible
alt
attributes -
Heading attributes fall in sequential order
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Title elements contain a concise, descriptive title
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Application's links all function correctly.
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Application's CSS selectors and properties are consolidated and organized to follow semantic structure.
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Application's CSS file is properly commented.
The Horiseon webpage includes a navigation bar, a header image, and cards with text and images at the bottom of the page has been provided but with <div>
elements, which need to be converted into accessible semantic tags, plus descriptions added to the <img>
tag using the alt=""
attribute>.
This is a basic static front-end website deployment which can be deployed on any server or client with a browser. The GIThub page deployment
All starter materials, code and images provided by EdX
This work is published under the MIT Licence