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Solution
Submitted over 2 years ago

Responsive 'Manage' landing page using Tailwind CSS

accessibility, tailwind-css
Aman Singh Bhogal•1,010
@asbhogal
A solution to the Manage landing page challenge
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Solution retrospective


This challenge has been built using Tailwind CSS. Vanilla JavaScript has been leveraged for the newsletter input (regex) and responsive mobile menu and Swiper JS has been integrated for the responsive testimonial slider.

If there are any specific questions you have regarding build, styling, functionalities, etc. then please feel free to let me know. While forking/cloning and working on this repository yourself is welcomed, I'd highly advise reading the README.md carefully beforehand. This is a comprehensive list of how the challenge has been attempted, and steps advised prior to and to take upon cloning/forking.

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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 1st-party linked stylesheets, and styles within <style> tags.

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.