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Nike Shoe Webstore

A little custom web store for Nike shoes. Used to demonstrate a number of concepts in HTML and CSS.

Tasks

"Fork" this repository, then "clone or download" (green button) this store repo and work on the tasks below.

Week 4

In-Class

  1. Style the .nav and its children to make it look a bit more like a production-ready navigation menu you might see in a real web store

Homework

  1. Apply a @media query at the breakpoint of your choice to turn .all-products from a 1-column static layout of blocks, into a 2-column grid.
    • Definitely use min-width to determine your breakpoint, designing from smallest to largest ("mobile first")
  2. Now create a bigger breakpoint and go for a 4-column grid, lining up all of the four products.
    • Do all 3 layouts co-exist nicely?

Week 5

In-Class

  1. Set the .nav to be fixed to the top of the viewport
    • Collapse the .nav-list so that it drops over top of the content
    • Ensure there is no content on the page that becomes inaccessible
  2. Set the .product-details to overlap it's img within the .product container
    • Give it a semi-transparent background and stretch it over the entire .product
    • Align the text elements to the center, both vertically and horizontally
    • Use z-index to ensure the .nav always stays above our .product-details
  3. Hide the .product-details using opacity: 0; and when someone hovers over the .product, set the .product-details of that item back to opacity: 0;
    • Animate it with transition

Homework

  1. Apply the reset.css to this project by pasting a copy of it into our /styles folder and attaching it to index.html, by pasting the following link into the <head> just before our stylesheet (styles.css): <link rel="stylesheet" href="styles/reset.css">
    • Compare the before and after by commenting in/out the reset <link>
    • Make the necessary adjustments to styles.css to ensure the page looks as good or better than it did pre-reset
  2. Add a "hamburger" menu button (the three-line icon) to the .nav
    • Start by using an image inside of a button (an .svg scales well), you can find a free-use version through a google image search
    • Next, challenge yourself by drawing your own "hamburger" button only using HTML and CSS (no image)! The benefit of drawing it yourself is that you can then animate the top and bottom lines to rotate into an "X" to close the menu once open! Use the following HTML to achieve that:
    <button type="button" name="hamburger" class="btn hamburger">
      <div></div>
      <div></div>
      <div></div>
    </button>
    
  3. Align the button to the right side of the .nav in your default (smallest) viewport layout, while keeping the logo in the middle
    • Try this using position
    • Try this using grid - If you use grid and apply it to the .nav, the .nav-list will now be part of the grid too! Be sure to consider that and apply grid-column if necessary to stretch the .nav-list across any columns you created to setup the .logo and .hamburger - Which method do you prefer?
  4. Ensure that when the screen hits your larger breakpoints, the .nav changes its layout to better suit the new increased available space
    • Remove the .hamburger button using CSS
    • Expose the .nav-list and align its children into a single row and align it to the right
    • Align the .logo over to the left
    • Do you still prefer position > grid, or grid > position?
  5. Clean up and style any odds/ends that are left unstyled to date (the footer, etc) and let's call this example a wrap!

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A simple web store

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