This is one of the required projects to earn your certification.
For this project, you will build a technical documentation page to serve as instruction or reference for a topic.
Objective: Build an app that is functionally similar to technical-documentation-page.freecodecamp.rocks.
Do not copy this demo project.
- You can see a
main
element with a correspondingid="main-doc"
, which contains the page's main content (technical documentation). - Within the
#main-doc
element, you can see severalsection
elements, each with a class ofmain-section
. There should be a minimum of five. - The first element within each
.main-section
should be aheader
element, which contains text that describes the topic of that section. - Each
section
element with the class ofmain-section
should also have anid
that corresponds with the text of eachheader
contained within it. Any spaces should be replaced with underscores (e.g. The section that contains the header "JavaScript and Java" should have a correspondingid="JavaScript_and_Java"
). - The
.main-section
elements should contain at least tenp
elements total (not each). - The
.main-section
elements should contain at least fivecode
elements total (not each). - The
.main-section
elements should contain at least fiveli
items total (not each). - You can see a
nav
element with a correspondingid="navbar"
. - The navbar element should contain one
header
element which contains text that describes the topic of the technical documentation - Additionally, the navbar should contain link (
a
) elements with the class ofnav-link
. There should be one for every element with the classmain-section
More user stories...
- The
header
element in the#navbar
must come before any link (a
) elements in the navbar - Each element with the class of
nav-link
should contain text that corresponds to theheader
text within eachsection
(e.g. if you have a "Hello world" section/header, your navbar should have an element which contains the text "Hello world") - When you click on a navbar element, the page should navigate to the corresponding section of the
#main-doc
element (e.g. If you click on a.nav-link
element that contains the text "Hello world", the page navigates to asection
element with that id, and contains the corresponding header) - On regular sized devices (laptops, desktops), the element with
id="navbar"
should be shown on the left side of the screen and should always be visible to the user - Your technical documentation should use at least one media query
Fulfill the user stories and pass all the tests below to complete this project. Give it your own personal style. Happy Coding!
Note: Be sure to add <link rel="stylesheet" href="styles.css">
in your HTML to link your stylesheet and apply your CSS