I don’t really see any websites that allow you to practice webdev skills asides from JS. Maybe ask the user to make like a project or a simple website with the things they want implement and have them rank it and stuff?
From some quick googling I found https://www.frontendmentor.io/. No idea if it’s any good.
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codecademy used to have some online exercises but I think they noticed that is not very profitable and now they mostly only do paywalled youtube “courses”. They might still have some tucked in there somewhere but I bet they’re still all pretty basic. Although not exactly what you’re looking for, you could practice CSS by trying to replicate the CSS on the CSS Zen Garden. The frontend mentor the other user recommended seems like the only big website doing frontend challenges anymore.
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HTML and CSS are pretty simple. It just requires a good deal of reading the manual.
Here are some links for reference:
https://www.w3schools.com/html/default.asp
https://www.w3schools.com/css/default.asp
https://sadgrl.online/learn/sections/snippets
If you want to post your website/web pages publicly, without having to pay for a domain, I highly recommend https://neocities.org/. A large number of people use that site as their testing ground, so it’s common to see websites with “under construction” GIFs and images on the homepage.
If you’d rather practice locally, you can use something like python to launch a webserver on your LAN and visit it with http://192.168.1.X (X being the last number provided by your device the server is running on).
You can find some instructions here: https://realpython.com/python-http-server/
It’s worth looking around at all the different websites on neocities, and also thinking about what you’d like to see personally as a form of self-expression. That’s how I got started, and it’s quite fun seeing where the project’s development takes you.
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Small update: So I found something that may help you out a bit. It’s a resource with 40 challenges (code is provided if you choose to look at it) for different effects.
URL: https://blog.bitsrc.io/40-html-css-projects-for-beginner-2021-5bd01ff62361?gi=119d34df83af
There’s a lot in here that I haven’t experience in producing on webpages, so I may use it when I feel inspired to take another crack at it. Still not a Project Euler, unfortunately. Most people seem to just freestyle their web development to gain experience and practice.
Again, I apologize if this isn’t quite what you’re looking for.
You’re welcome for the resources. I think I may have slightly misinterpreted your intentions.
I guess you’re suggesting me to try and replicate sites/webpages I may come across Neocities? (I heard of the place btw, I might make a site there soon)
Yes and no. I was more thinking of you seeing interesting effects created by people on their webpages and trying to reproduce those effects. I am not too sure of any resources that function like Project Euler, for web design, unfortunately. I would actually like to know if there’s anything out there like that too (I hope so).
I look forward to seeing your site, if you decide to share with us.
As for hosting a webserver locally, I’m using the Live Server extension on VSCode (ok it’s VSCodium but still), will that be enough for now?
That should do just fine. As long as you can get the site up and running and visit it on your LAN, it’ll do the job.
Sorry I couldn’t be of more help on this.
https://www.freecodecamp.org/learn/2022/responsive-web-design/
https://www.youtube.com/@TraversyMedia
Highly recommend Brad Traversy, his channel will more than enough get your feets wet in starting web dev.
Documentation:
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Here you go:
http://flexboxfroggy.com/ (Flex)
http://www.flexboxdefense.com/ (Flex)
https://cssgridgarden.com/ (Grid)
More CSS: https://css-tricks.com/
I second freecodecamp. I completed both the HTML and CSS courses and enjoyed them.
Exercism, although I am not sure if they treat them as languages, since they aren’t so maybe they don’t list them.
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A very oversimplified explanation is that to be a programming language, you need support for branching code (
if
statements and the like). HTML is a markup language and CSS is a style sheet language. Apparently they’re Turing complete when used together, but implementing even the most basic algorithms in HTML/CSS is very impractical, and impossible when the languages are used separatelyBecause they lack stuff that makes a language a language, they are a markup language similar to markdown, but it is true you need to remember it anyway.
I’m a huge proponent of The Odin Project
there’s w3c schools