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Build a Portfolio Using Bootstrap

Welcome to the Bootstrap Portfolio Project! For this project, you'll be creating a personal web page to show off your work. We will test your HTML knowledge and then it will be up to you to use CSS to style your own page and make it unique.

You’ll build a personal web page using Bootstrap, which should look similar to this one:

Bootstrap Portfolio

What You’ll Use

  • HTML
  • Bootstrap

We'll start you off with a few CSS styles that you can build on that should help get things started.

What You’ll Learn

You will further your Bootstrap skills, feel more comfortable writing Bootstrap code in a real-world scenario, and have the option of using this project as your real portfolio page.

Live Demo

Check out this link to see a working version of this project. Feel free to customize your project even further by adding more custom CSS styles to it once you've completed the steps.

Setup

Open this project’s directory in a text editor to complete this project. A text editor like Atom or Sublime Text will do the job. You will make changes to the src/index.html file to satisfy the requirements.

Tasks

Complete the following tasks to finish this project.

Create the Navigation Bar

At the top of our page, we'll want to create a navbar. Here is a sample navbar to help you get set up. Also feel free to check out Twitter Bootstrap's documentation on navbars. MENU

Name in Navbar

Change the contents of the <a> tag that has the navbar-brand CSS class to include your name instead of "Brand". MENU

Menu in Navbar

Change the contents of the <a> tags that are within the <li> menu elements. One tag should read "Home", and the other "About". MENU

Create the Carousel

Let's place a Bootstrap Carousel under our navbar. Here is a sample carousel to help you get set up. You can always learn more about Bootstrap's Carousel in their official documentation. MENU

Carousel Items

Change the three <h1> and <p> tags that are found under each .item element within our carousel to include three tag-lines. You can either use similar content that was already available in the page (under "Who I am", "What I do", etc) or come up with original content for yourself. MENU

Using Bootstrap's Grid System

Let's display some elements side-by-side using the Grid System. To do so, under our carousel, let's create three nested <div> tags. One should have the marketing CSS class, the next should have the container CSS class, and the third should have the row CSS class. MENU

Creating the Marketing Columns

Inside of .row, add three div elements with the col-md-4 CSS class. Each of these elements should have a: - span tag with the glyphicon class, plus another class indicating which icon you'd like to use (ie. "glyphicon-music", or "glyphicon-camera", etc). - h2 tag with a skill in it (ie. "HTML & CSS", or "JavaScript", or "Design", etc). - p tag describing why you enjoy using each skill (ie. "I enjoy making the web come to life with Angular", etc). MENU

Create the Footer

Under .marketing, let's create a footer element. Our footer needs to have a div inside it with the container CSS class. You'll see the footer stick to the bottom of the page, which happens because of some styling code we made available. MENU

The Elements Inside our Footer

Inside our footer container, let's create two elements: an h3 tag with a title inviting your visitors to get in touch with you, and a p tag describing how your visitors can get in touch. MENU

Cleaning Things Up

Let's remove the .header, .tagline, .skills and .contact elements as the same information should all be part of the carousel, marketing and footer elements now.

Next Steps

Now that you’re done, we highly encourage you to open the src/main.css file and customize things as much as you’d like!

You should also make your completed project available online so you can share your progress with others! One way of doing this is by using GitHub Pages.

To deploy your /src directory to GitHub Pages, be sure to commit all of your changes and make a new branch called gh-pages. Once you are checked into the gh-pages branch, run the following command:

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/BootstrapPortfolioProject, where username is your GitHub username.

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Code School Project: Portfolio created with Twitter Bootstrap

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  • JavaScript 57.7%
  • HTML 30.1%
  • CSS 12.2%