a. What worked well in your development process?
Well the layout was easy to do. After realizing that I was over-complicating the process by thinking like a designer rather than a developer. It is hard to let go of designing a bit to go ahead and work with what has been learned in class. I did some research on w3cschools but didn't come up with enough answers. So working with the code learned in class, I was able to work with the layout already available to me. From there everything got easier. I am devating still whether or not. I am going to work more content. I like how simple it is so far.
b. Who is your target audience? What design choices did choose to attract your audience to your site?
My audience is towards people who want little information and everything available to them. Not going through hoops to search for the information they want. I stick to a color scheme that went with a Christmas theme. My websites purpose to provide a list of farms that sell Christmas tree.
c. What browsers did you test in? What differences did you see?
Firefox, Safari, and Chrome. In all three the website looked exactly the same and nothing changed. All the links worked across all three platforms.
d. What troubleshooting did you experience?
I think layout without following the rules at first was really hard. After following the initial coding we worked in class it got easier. But changing the colors and figuring out what will change what took longer than expected.
e. Describe your validating experience.
It was hard. I forgot to close a couple of tags. I got scared. Fortunately a tutor was able to help go over my code and we got it working.
f. What best practices discussed in class assisted in your productivity?
Making the website easy to navigate. Color scheme that works and eye catching content. Easy to read.
g. Add a link to your web site within your blog posting
Christmas Trees
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