Code & design your first website (3:16)

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Code & Design Your First Website February 2017 http://bit.ly/thinkful-first-website

Transcript of Code & design your first website (3:16)

Code & Design Your First Website

February 2017

http://bit.ly/thinkful-first-website

About me

• Jasjit Singh

• Self-taught developer

• Worked in finance & tech

• Co-Founder Hotspot

• Thinkful General Manager

About us

Thinkful prepares students for web development & data science jobs through 1-on-1 mentorship programs

What’s your goal?

• Do you want to work better with developers?

• Do you want to start working in tech?

• Do you have an idea that you want to build?

What’s your programming background?

• First lines of code will be written tonight?

• Been self teaching for 1-3 months?

• Been at this for 3+ months

Goals

• How the web works

• Wireframe exercise

• Basics of HTML and CSS

• Lots of practice building

• Next steps in your learning

How the web works

Type a URL from a client (e.g. google.com)

Browser communicates with DNS server to find IP address

Browser sends an HTTP request asking for specific files

Browser receives those files and renders them as a website

Clients / Servers

ClientFrontend Developer

ServerBackend Developer

Programming fundamentals

Request

Response

Client - UI Logic Server - Business Logic

Database Servers

Example: facebook.com

HTML, CSS, & Javascript render

interactive newsfeed

Algorithm determines what’s in your feed

Request

Get data about your friends’s and their posts

Open browser and navigate to

facebook.com

Business Logic

Database Servers

Response

How that relates to what we’re doing today

HTML & CSS are the files that are stored on a server, sent to the client, and then rendered by your browser. Today, we’ll be writing these files.

Why start by learning “Frontend”?

• Easy to get started and see if coding is for you

• Get clear & immediate gratification

• Job opportunities

Tonight’s project

Design & build an “about me” webpage — your personal homepage on the internet

Wireframing your page

Wireframe exercise for “About Me”

• List out the topics you want to include

• Divide each topic into a section

• Layout the page (start at top and work down)

• Keep it simple — use Google for “inspiration”

Sample wireframe

Let’s start with HTML

HTML is the content and structure of a webpage It’s the skeleton of your website

By itself, HTML is ugly

We’ll make it pretty later

We will start with just HTML — we’ll then add a Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) file to “style” our website. More on that later…

Getting Started with Codepen

• Normally developers use a text editor

• Codepen lets us write HTML/CSS and see the results instantly

• Create an account: codepen.io/signup/free

• Skip profile info => Go to create a new “Pen”

First lines of HTML

<html>

<body>

<h1>Hello world!</h1>

</body>

</html>

Key HTML concepts

• Tags

• Elements

• Attributes

HTML tags

Every tag starts with a “less than” sign and ends with a “greater than” sign

<html> #this is an HTML opening tag

<body> #this is a body opening tag

<h1>Hello world!</h1> #this is set of H1 tags

</body> #this is a body closing tag

</html> #this is an HTML closing tag

More about tags

• There are opening tags and closing tags — closing tags have a backslash before the tag name (</html> versus <html>)

• Tags instruct a browser about the structure of our website

• There are hundreds of built-in tags though you’ll use the same few a lot

Non-exhaustive list of HTML tags

• <html> #html tags wrap your entire page

• <head> #head tags holds info about the page

• <body> #body tags wrap around your content

• <h1> #signifies the largest headline (through h6)

• <p> #wraps a paragraph of writing

• <div> #div tags are generic container tags

• <a> #anchor tags for text to be a link

• <ul><li> #unordered list of items

• <button> #this is a button

HTML elements

HTML elements usually consist of an opening tag, closing tag, and some content

<html> #html element starts here

<body> #body element starts here

<h1>Hello world!</h1> #this is an HTML element

</body> #body element ends here

</html> #html element ends here

More about elements

Some consist of just a self-closing tag

<img src=“http://i.imgur.com/Th5404r.jpg">

A note about <div>’s

We use <div> tags to separate sections of our site. This will allow for sophisticated styling. It’s a good habit to “wrap” most sections into a <div>

<div>

<h1>Hello world!</h1>

</div>

HTML attributes

HTML attributes set properties on an element — the are attached in the opening tag

<a href=“https://somewhere.com">This is a link</a>href is an attribute that sets the destination of a link

<h1 class=“headline”>This is a headline</h1>class is one attribute that identifies element (for CSS & Javascript)

<h1 id=“headline”>This is a headline</h1>id is another attribute that identifies element (for CSS & Javascript)

“About Me” website — HTML

http://codepen.io/jasjitsingh85/pen/XMdbgY

• “Fork” this code and lets walk through it together

• Drill — Add another section of your choosing

• Drill — Add a title and a paragraph in that section

• Drill — Try and add an image underneath “About Me”

What is CSS?

Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) interact with your HTML to determine the visual presentation of your webpages

CSS example

p {

color: red;

font-size: 36px;

}

CSS solves two problems

• Visual presentation of each element

• Layout of elements

Key CSS concepts

• Selectors

• Property

• Value

• Declaration / Declaration Block

CSS selectors

• Determine HTML elements to target for styles

• Can target tags, classes, id’s and many more!

• Selectors can be combined

Example selectors

p (selects all paragraph tags)

.name (selects HTML elements with class “name”)

#intro (selects HTML elements with id “intro”)

p.name (selects paragraph tags with class “name”)

CSS properties

Determines the aspect of the element’s appearance to change

• color (set the font color)

• font-family (sets main typeface and backup typefaces)

• background-image (sets background image)

• height (sets the height of an element)

More on CSS properties

• Each property has a default value — when you write CSS, you override that default with a new value

• There are lots of CSS properties! For a full list see http://www.htmldog.com/references/css/properties/

CSS values

Determines the aspect of the element’s appearance we wish to change

• color: red, blue, green, #CCCCCC acceptable values for the color property

• font-family: helvetica, arial, sans-serif acceptable values for the font-family property

• background-image: url(“imageFile.jpg")looks for a URL value for image file

• height: 40px, 50% set in pixels or percentage of container height

Declarations and declaration blocks

This is a declaration block containing two declarations

p {

color: red;

font-size: 36px;

}

CSS challenge

• Pick a typeface, color, and size for the words

• Add a “More About Me” section and put a border around it

• Add background colors to each section to separate them

From Codepen to reality

• Download Sublime Text (or another text editor)

• Create a new folder (“First Website”)

• Create a new HTML file in First Website folder (index.html)

• Copy & paste your Codepen HTML into this file

• Create a new css file in First Website folder (index.css)

• Copy & paste your Codepen CSS into this file

• Add link to your CSS in your HTML <head> section

• Save both files

• Double-click & open your index.html file

Layouts (time permitting)

• Display — inline vs. block

• The box model

• Positioning

In-line vs block

• Every element is either inline-block or block

• Block: element starts a new line and stretches to full width

• Inline: element doesn’t start new line, only as wide as need be

More on in-line vs block

• For a full list of inline elements, see: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Inline_elements

• For a full list of block-level elements, see: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Block-level_elements

Box model & position

• Static: normal flow. Block elements stack on top of each other. Inline elements are as large as the content they contain.

• Fixed: outside of normal flow. Stays in same place no matter what.

• Relative: normal flow. Unlike static, can use left, right, top, bottom properties to move the elements around relative to where they’d otherwise sit.

• Absolute: outside of normal flow. Stays in a specific spot on a page.

General learning tips for coding

• Google is your friend

• Practice at the edge of your abilities

• Ignore the hot new thing — depth matters more than breadth

More about Thinkful

• Anyone who’s committed can learn to code

• 1-on-1 mentorship is the best way to learn

• Flexibility matters — learn anywhere, anytime

• We only make money when you get a job

Our Program

You’ll learn concepts, practice with drills, and build capstone projects for your own portfolio — all guided by a personal mentor

Our Mentors

Mentors have, on average, 10+ years of experience

Our Results

Job Titles after GraduationMonths until Employed

Special Prep Course Offer

• Three-week program, includes six mentor sessions

• Covers HTML/CSS, Javascript, jQuery, Responsive Design

• Option to continue into web development bootcamp

• Prep course costs $500 (can apply to cost of full bootcamp)

• Talk to me (or email me) about special offer

October 2015

Questions? email me at [email protected]

or schedule a call through thinkful.com