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Solution
Submitted almost 3 years ago

Interactive rating component made with HTML, CSS and JS

Casparas•60
@termjs
A solution to the Interactive rating component challenge
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Solution retrospective


3rd challenge is complete. How did I do and what challenges should I attempt next?

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Community feedback

  • David•7,960
    @DavidMorgade
    Posted almost 3 years ago

    Hello Casparas, congrats completing the solution for this challenge

    Your rating component looks pretty good, I like the personal touch that you gave to it, pretty nice job!

    To answer your question I think a next step for you would be this challenge, the time tracking dashboard is a good challenge to practice layouts and fetching data at the same time fron the json file, you will learn a lot from it. The ip-address-tracker can be other option if you want to take a harder challenge! it's a lot of fun and requires fetching data and using a leaflet map.

    Hope my answer helps you deciding the next challenge you gonna take! good luck on it!

    Marked as helpful

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How does the accessibility report work?

When a solution is submitted, we use axe-core to run an automated audit of your code.

This picks out common accessibility issues like not using semantic HTML and not having proper heading hierarchies, among others.

This automated audit is fairly surface level, so we encourage to you review the project and code in more detail with accessibility best practices in mind.

How does the CSS report work?

When a solution is submitted, we use stylelint to run an automated check on the CSS code.

We've added some of our own linting rules based on recommended best practices. These rules are prefixed with frontend-mentor/ which you'll see at the top of each issue in the report.

The report will audit all CSS, SCSS and Less files in your repository.

How does the HTML validation report work?

When a solution is submitted, we use html-validate to run an automated check on the HTML code.

The report picks out common HTML issues such as not using headings within section elements and incorrect nesting of elements, among others.

Note that the report can pick up “invalid” attributes, which some frameworks automatically add to the HTML. These attributes are crucial for how the frameworks function, although they’re technically not valid HTML. As such, some projects can show up with many HTML validation errors, which are benign and are a necessary part of the framework.

How does the JavaScript validation report work?

When a solution is submitted, we use eslint to run an automated check on the JavaScript code.

The report picks out common JavaScript issues such as not using semicolons and using var instead of let or const, among others.

The report will audit all JS and JSX files in your repository. We currently do not support Typescript or other frontend frameworks.

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