Welcome to the Semantic HTML Portfolio Project! For this project, we'll be converting a portfolio created using basic HTML tags (div
, span
, etc) to use HTML 5's more semantic tags.
Please follow the instructions below to complete the project. Be sure to run tests to make sure your tests are passing before submitting your code.
We'll be using the Build a Portfolio Using HTML and CSS project as a starting point and converting it to use semantic HTML elements. The result won't look that different than before, but this will introduce a few new HTML elements into the mix to help make our HTML more clear. Here's a sample of what this could look like:
We'll use a bunch of HTML 5 elements, including:
header
footer
main
nav
section
If you've never used these elements, we recommend taking the Front-End Formations course to get familiar with these elements before jumping in.
Wondering what this project will look like when you've completed it? Follow this link to see a live version of this project.
To get started with this project, head over to the Semantic HTML Portfolio project on Code School, and begin!
To get setup locally, run the following commands:
npm install
npm start
Complete the following tasks to complete this project.
The element with a class of "header" isn't using the most semantic HTML tag it could be using. Switch it to use an element that most accurately wraps the header content for a page.
Our .nav
element in the header of the page isn't using the most semantic HTML tags it could be using. ul
is the correct one for this list of navigation items, but we should wrap this element with a more semantic element to indicate it is a navigation. Go ahead and add this.
Each of the main content areas of our portfolio could be switched from using div
tags to something that more accurately describes them as sections of our page. Update the .tagline
, .skills
and .contact
sections to use a more semantic HTML tag.
Our 3 main sections make up the focus of our page. Wrap these three sections (tagline, skills and contact) in an HTML element that gives it the correct focus.
Lastly, the element with a class of footer
isn't the most semantic use of that area either. Luckily HTML 5 has a much better element we can use for footers. Update this element to use the semantically correct tag.
Now that your site is working, the next step would be to deploy it to production!
Putting this site up on GitHub pages is a bit different than some other projects because the code is all in the /src
directory. There’s a nifty way to push this directory to a GitHub branch, which allows you to use GitHub pages with it! Try running this Git command for this project:
git subtree push --prefix src origin gh-pages
This will push the src
folder up to GitHub on the gh-pages
branch. After that, you should be able to open up http://username.github.io/SemanticHTMLPortfolioProject
, where username
is your GitHub username.