Portfolio2.0
By abbeyperini
heroicons
A set of free MIT-licensed high-quality SVG icons for UI development. (by tailwindlabs)
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Portfolio2.0 | heroicons | |
---|---|---|
9 | 78 | |
27 | 20,764 | |
- | 1.2% | |
6.4 | 7.3 | |
7 days ago | 15 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Portfolio2.0
Posts with mentions or reviews of Portfolio2.0.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-11-28.
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Dark Mode Toggle and prefers-color-scheme
You can check out all the code for this app in my portfolio repo.
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What are Favicons?
To update my favicon, I need to update two tags in my index.html file. Because of how React works, the two paths in my href="" attributes start with %PUBLIC_URL% before the /, but here's the code with a more universal path:
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Accessibility Auditing My Portfolio Site - Part 6
, because I want it to be visually hidden, I'll be fixing that when I get to this Github issue. WAVE mostly returned errors I had already vetted. It did actually catch one of the many broken links that I'll be fixing in this Github issue. It returned 27 long alt-text warnings on my blog page, but they're all less than 150 characters. I also got false positive contrast errors for my visually hidden skip links. ARC is down to primarily false positives. There were a couple I had to look up to make sure they were ok, like buttons with transparent backgrounds and using images with alt-text or an aria-label instead of text in links. The IBM Equal Access Accessibility checker just stopped working. It refused to scan even after I restarted Chrome, uninstalled and reinstalled it in Chrome, and installed it in Firefox. I saw something about the ruleset being undefined, so hopefully they fix that soon. Luckily, I ran it multiple times in Part 5 so I'm comfortable with moving on. The Microsoft Accessibility Insights Fast Pass didn't find anything that wasn't already on my radar, but I will be using the Assessment option as a guide for my manual testing again.
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Accessibility Auditing My Portfolio Site - Part 4
This blog will focus on making the blog preview component code on the main page of my site more accessible.
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An Accessible Dark Mode Toggle in React
My portfolio Github repository has all the toggle component code and the toggle CSS. The structure of the toggle looks like this:
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Accessibility Auditing My Portfolio Site - Part 2
If I wanted these to be the most accessible, I would also add another visual cue that showed "this link will open in a new tab" on hover or focus. This would be ideal for the links attached to the Github and Chrome SVGs and for keyboard and unassisted users that don't know what the external icon link means. However, I would want to spend time I don't have today designing a nice-looking version of that, so I've added this to my Github repository as my first backlog issue for this site.
- Adding Shiba Inu Loading and Error SVGs to My React Site
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A Walkthrough of Updating My Portfolio Site with Netlify Functions and the Dev.to API
When I found out DEV has an API that will send you the HTML of each of your blogs, I made a branch in my portfolio site repo, rewrote my FullBlog component, and attempted to call the API from within the established Blog React component. No dice. CORS error. Now I knew that I needed a server so I could use a CORS package or another solution. At this point, I also noticed I'd have to call the DEV API /articles/me endpoint to get the ids of each of my blogs and then call the /articles/{id} endpoint with the id to get the HTML version or find a solution for the markdown version.
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Toggle Dark Mode in React
Next, I added the toggle component to my navigation bar component. I styled the toggle following Chris Bongers’ Tutorial based on Katia De Juan’s Dribbble. Then I adjusted the size and flipped it to default to dark mode. While this toggle is so cute that you could die, this tutorial will work with any or clickable . First, I set up the basic JSX, the local state, and a variable to hold the theme we get from localStorage: import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react'; import '../styles/toggle.css'; import { setTheme } from '../utils/themes'; function Toggle() { const [togClass, setTogClass] = useState('dark'); let theme = localStorage.getItem('theme'); return (
{ togClass === "light" ? : }) } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Finally, my favorite part: the color switching SVGs! CSS variables work in SVG code too! I got my SVG code for the Github and Chrome icons from DEVICON. For the Github icon all I had to change was one fill attribute in a : fill="var(--dark-text)"> Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode The Chrome icon had a fill attribute in a and a : fill="var(--dark-text)" cx="63.624" cy="64.474" r="22.634"> fill="var(--dark-text)" ...> Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode The result looks like this: Conclusion I tried to include all of the relevant code, but you can also see the full code for my site in its Github repository. If you enjoyed this article or are left with questions, please leave a comment below! I would also love to see anything built following this tutorial.
heroicons
Posts with mentions or reviews of heroicons.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-04-01.
- Autopreenchimento de campos no FilamentPHP usando API
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Discord Clone Using Next.js and Tailwind - Part 3: Channel List
We start with the toggle button. We want icons for this that we get from heroicons. Let’s create a new file in the ChannelList folder called Icons.tsx and paste the code for the icons here to have a solid separation:
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Free Icons for your reactjs and web applications
7. Heroicons
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Create responsive navbar with React and Tailwind using the same markdown
Since we are on the mobile view we want to add a hamburger menu to toggle the links visibility. I am using heroicons. We use some basic react state to know whether or not the hambuger is open, and we conditionally render either the hamburger or an X.
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Using Heroicons with TailwindCSS
Heroicons are SVG-based icons packaged by the creators of TailwindCSS. They come in two size variants, 20, which is suitable for small buttons and form elements, and a 24 size, that is useful for primary navigation buttons like call to action and hero sections. 24 size comes as solid and outline.
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Complete Tutorial: React Admin Panel with refine and daisyUI
We have to install refine's support packages for React Table and React Hook Form. We are using Tailwind Heroicons for our icons, the Day.js library for time calculations and Recharts library to plot our charts for KPI data. So, run the following and we are good to go:
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29 Websites For Free Icon Sets
heroicons - Beautiful hand-crafted SVG icons, by the makers of Tailwind CSS.
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A simple theme switcher in React for Tailwind CSS
These depedencies provide unstyled accessible components from headless ui, icons from heroicons and common hooks with typescript support.
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Creating an Image Upload Modal with Crop and Rotate Functionality in React
To get started with our image modal implementation, i'll assume you already have a React project set up. For UI i’m using Tailwind CSS. But you can use any UI library as your wish. For the image cropping and rotating functionality, we'll be utilizing the react-easy-crop library. This library provides a simple and intuitive way to crop and interact with images and videos within a React component. We will also use the heroicons and classnames libraries in our tutorial. To install all the libraries and their dependencies, open your terminal and navigate to your project's directory. Run the following command:
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