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Introduction to web
technologies
HTML + CSS + Javascript
Javi Agenjo (@tamat)
Introduction
When you decide to develop an application using any
programming language, one of the first problem you
face is that programming languages do not include a
library to create User Interfaces.
You need to use some framework to access the OS
layer. Every programming language has at least one,
but you need to choose it first.
One of the nice things about developing for the web is
that the web provides a very rich and simple
framework to create applications that include lots of
features, not only interface but also access to
peripherals (audio, input, gamepads, etc), and this
API is very easy to use.
Your Code
Framework
Operative System
Hardware
Goals
Introduction to web technologies:
● HTML to create the document
structure and content
● CSS to control is visual aspect
● Javascript for interactivity
Deploy
What do we need to start:
- a good web-browser (Chrome or Firefox)
- the example HTML code to start
- a good text editor like Editplus (win), VSCode (cross platform),
textWrangler (osx), vim (unix) or sublime text (cross platform)
How can I test my code
Just open the index.html from the template in your text editor and in your
browser.
When you do any change to the code, check it in the browser by pressing
F5 (refresh site)
To open the developer tools press:
Windows: Control + Shift + I or F12
OSX: Command + Opt + I
Other tools are online editors like scratchpad or htmledit
Anatomy of a Browser
Inside a browser
Browsers have very differentiate parts.
We are interested in two of them:
● the Rendering Engine (in charge
of transforming our HTML+CSS in
a visual image).
● The Javascript Interpreter (also
known as VM), in charge of
executing the Javascript code.
Technologies
● HTML
● CSS
● Javascript
Browsers as a renderer
Browser's act as a renderer that takes documents
and construct a visual representation of them.
Starting with the most simple one, a text document, it
will try to visualize it.
You can try, drop any .txt file into your browser to
visualize it.
The problem is that text documents without any
formatting tend to be hard to read for the user (and
quite boring).
That's why HTML was created, to give text some
format.
Markup language
There are many markup languages that
add special tags into the text that the
renderer wont show but use to know
how to display the text.
In HTML this tags use the next notation:
My name is <b>Javi</b>
HTML
HTML means Hyper Text Markup Language.
The HTML allow us to define the structure of a document or a
website.
HTML is NOT a programming language, it’s a markup language,
which means its purpose is to give structure to the content of the
website, not to define an algorithm.
It is a series of nested tags (it is a subset of XML) that contain all
the website information (like texts, images and videos). Here is an
example of tags:
<title>This is a title</title>
The HTML defines the page structure. A website can have several
HTMLs to different pages.
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<div>
<p>Hi</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>
HTML: basic rules
Some rules about HTML:
● It uses XML syntax (tags with attributes, can contain other tags).
<tag_name attribute="value"> content </tag_name>
● It stores all the information that must be shown to the user.
● There are different HTML elements for different types of information and behaviour.
● The information is stored in a tree-like structure (nodes that contain nodes inside)
called DOM (Document Object Model).
● It gives the document some semantic structure (pe. this is a title, this is a section, this is
a form) which is helpful for computers to understand websites content.
● It must not contain information related to how it should be displayed (that information
belongs to the CSS), so no color information, font size, position, etc.
HTML: syntax example
<div id="main">
<!-- this is a comment -->
This is text without a tag.
<button class="mini">press me</button>
<img src="me.png" />
</div>
HTML: syntax example
<div id="main">
<!-- this is a comment -->
This is text without a tag.
<button class="mini">press me</button>
<img src="me.png" />
</div>
Tag name
attributes
comment
text tag
self-closing tag
DOM is a tree
Every node can only have
one parent, and every node
can have several children,
so the structure looks like a
tree.
Introduction to HTML+CSS+Javascript.pptx
Although there are lots of tags in the HTML specification, 99% of the webs use a subset of
HTML tags with less that 10 tags, the most important are:
● <div>: a container, usually represents a rectangular area with information inside.
● <img/>: an image
● <a>: a clickable link to go to another URL
● <p>: a text paragraph
● <h1>: a title (h2,h3,h4 are titles of less importance)
● <input>: a widget to let the user introduce information
● <style>: to insert CSS rules
● <script>: to execute Javascript
● <span>: a null tag (doesn't do anything)
HTML: main tags
HTML: other interesting tags
There are some tags that could be useful sometimes:
● <button>: to create a button
● <audio>: for playing audio
● <video>: to play video
● <canvas>: to draw graphics from javascript
● <iframe>: to put another website inside ours
HTML: wrapping the info
We use HTML tags to wrap different
information on our site.
The more structure has the information, the
easier will be to access it and present it.
We can change the way the information is
represented on the screen depending on the
tags where it is contained, so we shouldn't be
worried about using too many tags.
HTML: tagging correctly
Try to avoid doing this:
<div>
Title
Here is some content
Here is more content
</div>
Do this instead
<div>
<h1>Title</h1>
<p>Here is content.</p>
<p>Here is more content</p>
</div>
HTML good use
It is good to have all the information properly wrapped in tags that give it some
semantics.
We also can extend the code semantics by adding extra attributes to the tags:
● id: tells a unique identifier for this tag
● class: tells a generic identifier for this tag
<div id="profile-picture" class="mini-image">...</div>
HTML references
HTML Reference: a description of all HTML tags.
The 25 Most used tags: a list with information of the more
common tags.
HTML5 Good practices: some tips for starters
Technologies
● HTML
● CSS
● Javascript
CSS
CSS allows us to specify how to present
(render) the document info stored in the
HTML.
Thanks to CSS we can control all the
aspects of the visualization and some other
features:
● Colors: content, background, borders
● Margins: interior margin, exterior
margin
● Position: where to put it
● Sizes: width, height
● Behaviour: changes on mouse over
CSS example
* {
color: blue; /*a comment */
margin: 10px;
font: 14px Tahoma;
}
This will change all the tags in my web ( ‘*‘ means all) to look blue with font Tahoma with
14px, and leaving a margin of 10px around.
CSS fields
Here is a list of the most common CSS fields and an example:
● color: #FF0000; red; rgba(255,00,100,1.0); //different ways to specify colors
● background-color: red;
● background-image: url('file.png');
● font: 18px 'Tahoma';
● border: 2px solid black;
● border-top: 2px solid red;
● border-radius: 2px; //to remove corners and make them more round
● margin: 10px; //distance from the border to the outer elements
● padding: 2px; //distance from the border to the inner elements
● width: 100%; 300px; 1.3em; //many different ways to specify distances
● height: 200px;
● text-align: center;
● box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px black;
● cursor: pointer;
● display: inline-block;
● overflow: hidden;
CSS how to add it
There are four ways to add CSS rules to your website:
● Inserting the code inside a style tag
<style>
p { color: blue }
</style>
● Referencing an external CSS file
<link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet" />
● Using the attribute style on a tag
<p style="color: blue; margin: 10px">
● Using Javascript (we will see this one later).
CSS selectors
Let's start by changing the background color of one tag of our website:
div {
background-color: red;
}
This CSS rule means that every tag DIV found in our website should have a red background
color. Remember that DIVs are used mostly to represent areas of our website.
We could also change the whole website background by affecting the tag body:
body {
background-color: red;
}
CSS selectors
What if we want to change one specific tag (not all the tags of the same type).
We can specify more precise selectors besides the name of the tag. For instance, by class
or id. To specify a tag with a given class name, we use the dot:
p.intro {
color: red;
}
This will affect only the tags p with class name intro:
<p class="intro">
CSS Selectors
There are several selectors we can use to narrow our rules to very specific tags of our website.
The main selectors are:
● tag name: just the name of the tag
○ p { ... } //affects to all <p> tags
● dot (.): affects to tags with that class
○ p.highlight { ... } //affects all <p> tags with class="highlight"
● sharp character (#): specifies tags with that id
○ p#intro { ... } //affects to the <p> tag with the id="intro"
● two dots (:): behaviour states (mouse on top)
○ p:hover { ... } //affects to <p> tags with the mouse over
● brackets ([attr='value']): tags with the attribute attr with the value 'value'
○ input[type="text"] {...} // affects to the input tags of the type text
CSS Selectors
You can also specify tags by its context, for example: tags that are inside of tags matching a
selector. Just separate the selectors by an space:
div#main p.intro { ... }
This will affect to the p tags of class intro that are inside the tag div of id main
<div id="main">
<p class="intro">....</p> ← Affects this one
</div>
<p class="intro">....</p> ← but not this one
CSS Selectors
And you can combine selectors to narrow it down more.
div#main.intro:hover { ... }
will apply the CSS to the any tag div with id main and class intro if the mouse is over.
And you do not need to specify a tag, you can use the class or id selectors without tag, this
means it will affect to any node of id main
#main { ... }
CSS Selectors
If you want to select only elements that are direct child of one element (not that have an
ancestor with that rule), use the > character:
ul.menu > li { ... }
Finally, if you want to use the same CSS actions to several selectors, you can use the
comma , character:
div, p { … } ← this will apply to all divs and p tags
HTML arrange
It is important to understand how the browser
arranges the elements on the screen.
Check this tutorial where it explains the
different ways an element can be arranged
on the screen.
You can change the way elements are
arranged using the display property:
div { display: inline-block; }
Also check the property float.
Box Model
It is important to note that by default any
width and height specified to an element will
not take into account its margin, so a div with
width 100px and margin 10px will measure
120px on the screen, not 100px.
This could be a problem breaking your
layout.
You can change this behaviour changing the
box model of the element so the width uses
the outmost border:
div { box-sizing: border; }
Layout
One of the hardest parts of CSS is
construing the layout of your website (the
structure inside the window) .
By default HTML tends to put everything in
one column, which is not ideal.
There has been many proposals in CSS to
address this issue (tables, fixed divs, flex,
grid, …).
Grid system
Because most sites are structured in a grid, I
recommend to use the CSS Grid system.
Check this tutorial to create the site structure
easily
HTML
<div class="grid-container">
<div class="grid-item1">1</div>
<div class="grid-item2">2</div>
</div>
CSS
.grid-container {
display: grid;
grid-template-rows: 100px; 100px;
grid-template-columns: 100px; 100px; 100px;
grid-gap: 5px;
}
.grid-item1 {
background: blue;
border: black 5px solid;
grid-column-start: 1;
grid-column-end: 5;
grid-row-start: 1;
grid-row-end: 3;
}
Fullscreen divs
Sometimes we want to have a div that covers
the whole screen (to make a webapp),
instead of a scrolling website (more like
regular documents).
In that case remember to use percentages to
define the size of elements, but keep in mind
that percentages are relative to the element's
parent size, so you must set the size to the
<body> element to use 100%.
CSS
html, body {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
div {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
#main {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
Trick to center
.horizontal-and-vertical-centering {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
align-items: center;
}
Centering divs can be hard sometimes, use this trick:
CSS further reading
There are many more rules for selectors.
Check some of the links to understand them better.
One line layouts tutorials
Understanding the Box Model: a good explanation of how to position the information on your
document.
All CSS Selectors: the CSS selectors specification page.
CSS Transition: how to make animations just using CSS
TailwindCSS: a CSS Framework
Technologies
● HTML
● CSS
● Javascript
Javascript
A regular programming language, easy to start, hard to master.
Allows to give some interactivity to the elements on the web.
Syntax similar to C or Java but with no types.
You can change the content of the HTML or the CSS applied to an element.
You can even send or retrieve information from the internet to update the content
of the web without reloading the page.
Javascript: insert code
There is three ways to execute javascript code in a website:
● Embed the code in the HTML using the <script> tag.
<script> /* some code */ </script>
● Import a Javascript file using the <script> tag:
<script src="file.js" />
● Inject the code on an event inside a tag:
<button onclick="javascript: /*code*/">press me</button>
Javascript: Syntax
Very similar to C++ or Java but much simpler.
var my_number = 10; //this is a comment
var my_string = "hello";
var my_array = [10,20,"name",true];
var my_object = { name: "javi", city: "Barcelona" };
function say( str )
{
for(var i = 0; i < 10; ++i)
console.log(" say: " + str );
}
Javascript example
<html>
<body>
<h1>This is a title</h1>
<script>
var title = document.querySelector("h1");
title.innerHTML = "This is another title";
</script>
</body>
</html>
Javascript API
Javascript comes with a rich API to do many things like:
● Access the DOM (HTML nodes)
● Do HTTP Requests
● Play videos and sounds
● Detect user actions (mouse move, key pressed)
● Launch Threads
● Access the GPU, get the Webcam image, ...
And the API keeps growing with every new update of the standard.
Check the WEB API reference to know more
Javascript: retrieving element
You can get elements from the DOM (HTML tree) using different approaches.
● Crawling the HTML tree (starting from the body, and traversing its children)
● Using a selector (like in CSS)
● Attaching events listeners (calling functions when some actions are
performed)
Javascript: crawling the DOM
From javascript you have different variables that you can access to get
information about the website:
● document: the DOM information (HTML)
● window: the browser window
The document variable allows to crawl the tree:
document.body.children[0] // returns the first node inside body tag
Javascript: using selectors
You can retrieve elements using selectors:
var nodes = document.querySelectorAll("p.intro");
will return an array with all <p class="intro"> nodes in the web.
Or if we have already a node and we want to search inside:
var node = mynode.querySelectorAll("p.intro")
Javascript: modify nodes
From JS you can change the attributes
mynode.id = "intro"; //sets an id
mynode.className = "important"; //set class
mynode.classList.add("good"); //to add to the current classes
Change the content
mynode.innerHTML = "<p>text to show</p>"; //change content
Modify the style (CSS)
mynode.style.color = "red"; //change any css properties
or add the behaviour of a node
mynode.addEventListener("click", function(e) {
//do something
});
Javascript: create nodes
Create elements:
var element = document.createElement("div");
And attach them to the DOM:
document.querySelector("#main").appendChild( element );
Or remove it from its parent:
var element = document.querySelector("foo");
element.parentNode.removeChild( element );
You can clone an element also easily:
var cloned = element.cloneNode(true);
Javascript: hide and show elements
Sometimes it may be useful to hide one element or show another.
You can change an element CSS directly by accessing its property style.
To avoid being displayed on the web change display to "none"
element.style.display = "none"; //hides elements from being rendered
element.style.display = ""; //displays it again
Using Inputs
If you want the user to be able to input some text we use the tag <input>:
<input type="text"/>
There are other inputs, you can check this list.
From Javascript we can attach events like "click" or "keydown".
To read or modify the content of the input:
my_input_element.value = ""; //this will clear the text inside the input
Example of a website
HTML in index.html
<link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<h1>Welcome</h1>
<p>
<button>Click me</button>
</p>
<script src=”code.js”/>
CSS in style.css
h1 { color: #333; }
button {
border: 2px solid #AAA;
background-color: #555;
}
Javascript in code.js
//fetch the button from the DOM
var button = document.querySelector(“button”);
//attach and event when the user clicks it
button.addEventListener(“click”, myfunction);
//create the function that will be called when the
button is pressed
function myfunction()
{
//this shows a popup window
alert(“button clicked!”);
}
Execution flow
It is important to have a clear understanding of
the execution flow of your code.
Scripts are executed when the html is being
parsed.
Be careful accessing the DOM as the DOM
won’t contain all until all the HTML is parsed.
It is good practice to start your code with an init
function called at the end of your HTML.
jQuery
jQuery is a library that makes working with the DOM much easier, using an unified
syntax and taking advantage of selectors:
$("p").remove(); //remove all tags p
$("#main").hide(); //hides the element of id main
$("#main").append("<h1>titulo</h1>") //adds content to an element
$("#wrap").css({ color: "red" }); //change the css
$("button#send").click( function() { /* code */ });
To include this library just add this to your HTML:
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.4.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Using the Dev Tools
Press Control + Shift + I (or F12) to open DevTools
Exercise
Create the layout for a
messaging application.
Structured like:
● Main container
○ Messages area
■ message
○ Typing area area
■ input
Further info
API References: DevDocs.io
Selectors: MDN Tutorial
To learn Javascript.
http://codeacademy.com
To learn jQuery:
http://docs.jquery.com/Tutorials

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Introduction to HTML+CSS+Javascript.pptx

  • 1. Introduction to web technologies HTML + CSS + Javascript Javi Agenjo (@tamat)
  • 2. Introduction When you decide to develop an application using any programming language, one of the first problem you face is that programming languages do not include a library to create User Interfaces. You need to use some framework to access the OS layer. Every programming language has at least one, but you need to choose it first. One of the nice things about developing for the web is that the web provides a very rich and simple framework to create applications that include lots of features, not only interface but also access to peripherals (audio, input, gamepads, etc), and this API is very easy to use. Your Code Framework Operative System Hardware
  • 3. Goals Introduction to web technologies: ● HTML to create the document structure and content ● CSS to control is visual aspect ● Javascript for interactivity
  • 4. Deploy What do we need to start: - a good web-browser (Chrome or Firefox) - the example HTML code to start - a good text editor like Editplus (win), VSCode (cross platform), textWrangler (osx), vim (unix) or sublime text (cross platform)
  • 5. How can I test my code Just open the index.html from the template in your text editor and in your browser. When you do any change to the code, check it in the browser by pressing F5 (refresh site) To open the developer tools press: Windows: Control + Shift + I or F12 OSX: Command + Opt + I Other tools are online editors like scratchpad or htmledit
  • 6. Anatomy of a Browser
  • 7. Inside a browser Browsers have very differentiate parts. We are interested in two of them: ● the Rendering Engine (in charge of transforming our HTML+CSS in a visual image). ● The Javascript Interpreter (also known as VM), in charge of executing the Javascript code.
  • 9. Browsers as a renderer Browser's act as a renderer that takes documents and construct a visual representation of them. Starting with the most simple one, a text document, it will try to visualize it. You can try, drop any .txt file into your browser to visualize it. The problem is that text documents without any formatting tend to be hard to read for the user (and quite boring). That's why HTML was created, to give text some format.
  • 10. Markup language There are many markup languages that add special tags into the text that the renderer wont show but use to know how to display the text. In HTML this tags use the next notation: My name is <b>Javi</b>
  • 11. HTML HTML means Hyper Text Markup Language. The HTML allow us to define the structure of a document or a website. HTML is NOT a programming language, it’s a markup language, which means its purpose is to give structure to the content of the website, not to define an algorithm. It is a series of nested tags (it is a subset of XML) that contain all the website information (like texts, images and videos). Here is an example of tags: <title>This is a title</title> The HTML defines the page structure. A website can have several HTMLs to different pages. <html> <head> </head> <body> <div> <p>Hi</p> </div> </body> </html>
  • 12. HTML: basic rules Some rules about HTML: ● It uses XML syntax (tags with attributes, can contain other tags). <tag_name attribute="value"> content </tag_name> ● It stores all the information that must be shown to the user. ● There are different HTML elements for different types of information and behaviour. ● The information is stored in a tree-like structure (nodes that contain nodes inside) called DOM (Document Object Model). ● It gives the document some semantic structure (pe. this is a title, this is a section, this is a form) which is helpful for computers to understand websites content. ● It must not contain information related to how it should be displayed (that information belongs to the CSS), so no color information, font size, position, etc.
  • 13. HTML: syntax example <div id="main"> <!-- this is a comment --> This is text without a tag. <button class="mini">press me</button> <img src="me.png" /> </div>
  • 14. HTML: syntax example <div id="main"> <!-- this is a comment --> This is text without a tag. <button class="mini">press me</button> <img src="me.png" /> </div> Tag name attributes comment text tag self-closing tag
  • 15. DOM is a tree Every node can only have one parent, and every node can have several children, so the structure looks like a tree.
  • 17. Although there are lots of tags in the HTML specification, 99% of the webs use a subset of HTML tags with less that 10 tags, the most important are: ● <div>: a container, usually represents a rectangular area with information inside. ● <img/>: an image ● <a>: a clickable link to go to another URL ● <p>: a text paragraph ● <h1>: a title (h2,h3,h4 are titles of less importance) ● <input>: a widget to let the user introduce information ● <style>: to insert CSS rules ● <script>: to execute Javascript ● <span>: a null tag (doesn't do anything) HTML: main tags
  • 18. HTML: other interesting tags There are some tags that could be useful sometimes: ● <button>: to create a button ● <audio>: for playing audio ● <video>: to play video ● <canvas>: to draw graphics from javascript ● <iframe>: to put another website inside ours
  • 19. HTML: wrapping the info We use HTML tags to wrap different information on our site. The more structure has the information, the easier will be to access it and present it. We can change the way the information is represented on the screen depending on the tags where it is contained, so we shouldn't be worried about using too many tags.
  • 20. HTML: tagging correctly Try to avoid doing this: <div> Title Here is some content Here is more content </div> Do this instead <div> <h1>Title</h1> <p>Here is content.</p> <p>Here is more content</p> </div>
  • 21. HTML good use It is good to have all the information properly wrapped in tags that give it some semantics. We also can extend the code semantics by adding extra attributes to the tags: ● id: tells a unique identifier for this tag ● class: tells a generic identifier for this tag <div id="profile-picture" class="mini-image">...</div>
  • 22. HTML references HTML Reference: a description of all HTML tags. The 25 Most used tags: a list with information of the more common tags. HTML5 Good practices: some tips for starters
  • 24. CSS CSS allows us to specify how to present (render) the document info stored in the HTML. Thanks to CSS we can control all the aspects of the visualization and some other features: ● Colors: content, background, borders ● Margins: interior margin, exterior margin ● Position: where to put it ● Sizes: width, height ● Behaviour: changes on mouse over
  • 25. CSS example * { color: blue; /*a comment */ margin: 10px; font: 14px Tahoma; } This will change all the tags in my web ( ‘*‘ means all) to look blue with font Tahoma with 14px, and leaving a margin of 10px around.
  • 26. CSS fields Here is a list of the most common CSS fields and an example: ● color: #FF0000; red; rgba(255,00,100,1.0); //different ways to specify colors ● background-color: red; ● background-image: url('file.png'); ● font: 18px 'Tahoma'; ● border: 2px solid black; ● border-top: 2px solid red; ● border-radius: 2px; //to remove corners and make them more round ● margin: 10px; //distance from the border to the outer elements ● padding: 2px; //distance from the border to the inner elements ● width: 100%; 300px; 1.3em; //many different ways to specify distances ● height: 200px; ● text-align: center; ● box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px black; ● cursor: pointer; ● display: inline-block; ● overflow: hidden;
  • 27. CSS how to add it There are four ways to add CSS rules to your website: ● Inserting the code inside a style tag <style> p { color: blue } </style> ● Referencing an external CSS file <link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet" /> ● Using the attribute style on a tag <p style="color: blue; margin: 10px"> ● Using Javascript (we will see this one later).
  • 28. CSS selectors Let's start by changing the background color of one tag of our website: div { background-color: red; } This CSS rule means that every tag DIV found in our website should have a red background color. Remember that DIVs are used mostly to represent areas of our website. We could also change the whole website background by affecting the tag body: body { background-color: red; }
  • 29. CSS selectors What if we want to change one specific tag (not all the tags of the same type). We can specify more precise selectors besides the name of the tag. For instance, by class or id. To specify a tag with a given class name, we use the dot: p.intro { color: red; } This will affect only the tags p with class name intro: <p class="intro">
  • 30. CSS Selectors There are several selectors we can use to narrow our rules to very specific tags of our website. The main selectors are: ● tag name: just the name of the tag ○ p { ... } //affects to all <p> tags ● dot (.): affects to tags with that class ○ p.highlight { ... } //affects all <p> tags with class="highlight" ● sharp character (#): specifies tags with that id ○ p#intro { ... } //affects to the <p> tag with the id="intro" ● two dots (:): behaviour states (mouse on top) ○ p:hover { ... } //affects to <p> tags with the mouse over ● brackets ([attr='value']): tags with the attribute attr with the value 'value' ○ input[type="text"] {...} // affects to the input tags of the type text
  • 31. CSS Selectors You can also specify tags by its context, for example: tags that are inside of tags matching a selector. Just separate the selectors by an space: div#main p.intro { ... } This will affect to the p tags of class intro that are inside the tag div of id main <div id="main"> <p class="intro">....</p> ← Affects this one </div> <p class="intro">....</p> ← but not this one
  • 32. CSS Selectors And you can combine selectors to narrow it down more. div#main.intro:hover { ... } will apply the CSS to the any tag div with id main and class intro if the mouse is over. And you do not need to specify a tag, you can use the class or id selectors without tag, this means it will affect to any node of id main #main { ... }
  • 33. CSS Selectors If you want to select only elements that are direct child of one element (not that have an ancestor with that rule), use the > character: ul.menu > li { ... } Finally, if you want to use the same CSS actions to several selectors, you can use the comma , character: div, p { … } ← this will apply to all divs and p tags
  • 34. HTML arrange It is important to understand how the browser arranges the elements on the screen. Check this tutorial where it explains the different ways an element can be arranged on the screen. You can change the way elements are arranged using the display property: div { display: inline-block; } Also check the property float.
  • 35. Box Model It is important to note that by default any width and height specified to an element will not take into account its margin, so a div with width 100px and margin 10px will measure 120px on the screen, not 100px. This could be a problem breaking your layout. You can change this behaviour changing the box model of the element so the width uses the outmost border: div { box-sizing: border; }
  • 36. Layout One of the hardest parts of CSS is construing the layout of your website (the structure inside the window) . By default HTML tends to put everything in one column, which is not ideal. There has been many proposals in CSS to address this issue (tables, fixed divs, flex, grid, …).
  • 37. Grid system Because most sites are structured in a grid, I recommend to use the CSS Grid system. Check this tutorial to create the site structure easily HTML <div class="grid-container"> <div class="grid-item1">1</div> <div class="grid-item2">2</div> </div> CSS .grid-container { display: grid; grid-template-rows: 100px; 100px; grid-template-columns: 100px; 100px; 100px; grid-gap: 5px; } .grid-item1 { background: blue; border: black 5px solid; grid-column-start: 1; grid-column-end: 5; grid-row-start: 1; grid-row-end: 3; }
  • 38. Fullscreen divs Sometimes we want to have a div that covers the whole screen (to make a webapp), instead of a scrolling website (more like regular documents). In that case remember to use percentages to define the size of elements, but keep in mind that percentages are relative to the element's parent size, so you must set the size to the <body> element to use 100%. CSS html, body { width: 100%; height: 100%; } div { margin: 0; padding: 0; } #main { width: 100%; height: 100%; }
  • 39. Trick to center .horizontal-and-vertical-centering { display: flex; justify-content: center; align-items: center; } Centering divs can be hard sometimes, use this trick:
  • 40. CSS further reading There are many more rules for selectors. Check some of the links to understand them better. One line layouts tutorials Understanding the Box Model: a good explanation of how to position the information on your document. All CSS Selectors: the CSS selectors specification page. CSS Transition: how to make animations just using CSS TailwindCSS: a CSS Framework
  • 42. Javascript A regular programming language, easy to start, hard to master. Allows to give some interactivity to the elements on the web. Syntax similar to C or Java but with no types. You can change the content of the HTML or the CSS applied to an element. You can even send or retrieve information from the internet to update the content of the web without reloading the page.
  • 43. Javascript: insert code There is three ways to execute javascript code in a website: ● Embed the code in the HTML using the <script> tag. <script> /* some code */ </script> ● Import a Javascript file using the <script> tag: <script src="file.js" /> ● Inject the code on an event inside a tag: <button onclick="javascript: /*code*/">press me</button>
  • 44. Javascript: Syntax Very similar to C++ or Java but much simpler. var my_number = 10; //this is a comment var my_string = "hello"; var my_array = [10,20,"name",true]; var my_object = { name: "javi", city: "Barcelona" }; function say( str ) { for(var i = 0; i < 10; ++i) console.log(" say: " + str ); }
  • 45. Javascript example <html> <body> <h1>This is a title</h1> <script> var title = document.querySelector("h1"); title.innerHTML = "This is another title"; </script> </body> </html>
  • 46. Javascript API Javascript comes with a rich API to do many things like: ● Access the DOM (HTML nodes) ● Do HTTP Requests ● Play videos and sounds ● Detect user actions (mouse move, key pressed) ● Launch Threads ● Access the GPU, get the Webcam image, ... And the API keeps growing with every new update of the standard. Check the WEB API reference to know more
  • 47. Javascript: retrieving element You can get elements from the DOM (HTML tree) using different approaches. ● Crawling the HTML tree (starting from the body, and traversing its children) ● Using a selector (like in CSS) ● Attaching events listeners (calling functions when some actions are performed)
  • 48. Javascript: crawling the DOM From javascript you have different variables that you can access to get information about the website: ● document: the DOM information (HTML) ● window: the browser window The document variable allows to crawl the tree: document.body.children[0] // returns the first node inside body tag
  • 49. Javascript: using selectors You can retrieve elements using selectors: var nodes = document.querySelectorAll("p.intro"); will return an array with all <p class="intro"> nodes in the web. Or if we have already a node and we want to search inside: var node = mynode.querySelectorAll("p.intro")
  • 50. Javascript: modify nodes From JS you can change the attributes mynode.id = "intro"; //sets an id mynode.className = "important"; //set class mynode.classList.add("good"); //to add to the current classes Change the content mynode.innerHTML = "<p>text to show</p>"; //change content Modify the style (CSS) mynode.style.color = "red"; //change any css properties or add the behaviour of a node mynode.addEventListener("click", function(e) { //do something });
  • 51. Javascript: create nodes Create elements: var element = document.createElement("div"); And attach them to the DOM: document.querySelector("#main").appendChild( element ); Or remove it from its parent: var element = document.querySelector("foo"); element.parentNode.removeChild( element ); You can clone an element also easily: var cloned = element.cloneNode(true);
  • 52. Javascript: hide and show elements Sometimes it may be useful to hide one element or show another. You can change an element CSS directly by accessing its property style. To avoid being displayed on the web change display to "none" element.style.display = "none"; //hides elements from being rendered element.style.display = ""; //displays it again
  • 53. Using Inputs If you want the user to be able to input some text we use the tag <input>: <input type="text"/> There are other inputs, you can check this list. From Javascript we can attach events like "click" or "keydown". To read or modify the content of the input: my_input_element.value = ""; //this will clear the text inside the input
  • 54. Example of a website HTML in index.html <link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet"/> <h1>Welcome</h1> <p> <button>Click me</button> </p> <script src=”code.js”/> CSS in style.css h1 { color: #333; } button { border: 2px solid #AAA; background-color: #555; } Javascript in code.js //fetch the button from the DOM var button = document.querySelector(“button”); //attach and event when the user clicks it button.addEventListener(“click”, myfunction); //create the function that will be called when the button is pressed function myfunction() { //this shows a popup window alert(“button clicked!”); }
  • 55. Execution flow It is important to have a clear understanding of the execution flow of your code. Scripts are executed when the html is being parsed. Be careful accessing the DOM as the DOM won’t contain all until all the HTML is parsed. It is good practice to start your code with an init function called at the end of your HTML.
  • 56. jQuery jQuery is a library that makes working with the DOM much easier, using an unified syntax and taking advantage of selectors: $("p").remove(); //remove all tags p $("#main").hide(); //hides the element of id main $("#main").append("<h1>titulo</h1>") //adds content to an element $("#wrap").css({ color: "red" }); //change the css $("button#send").click( function() { /* code */ }); To include this library just add this to your HTML: <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.4.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
  • 57. Using the Dev Tools Press Control + Shift + I (or F12) to open DevTools
  • 58. Exercise Create the layout for a messaging application. Structured like: ● Main container ○ Messages area ■ message ○ Typing area area ■ input
  • 59. Further info API References: DevDocs.io Selectors: MDN Tutorial To learn Javascript. http://codeacademy.com To learn jQuery: http://docs.jquery.com/Tutorials