Creating some Dribbble like cards
See the Pen Dribbble Cards - Draft 1 by Mel Baylon (@melbaylon) on CodePen.




#ao3#writeblr#ao3 fanfic#writing community#archive of our own
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from T1

seen from T1
seen from Philippines
seen from T1

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from T1

seen from Argentina
Creating some Dribbble like cards
See the Pen Dribbble Cards - Draft 1 by Mel Baylon (@melbaylon) on CodePen.
Adding temporary borders help to see the pieces that make up a website.
Great reference for styling images.
Learning JavaScript functions by creating my own investment calculator. 📈
Coding (instead of designing it in Adobe illustrator) a profile picture for mainly monospaced.
I went back to freeCodeCamp
Sometime last year I started learning web development at freeCodeCamp. Then I took a break.
When I decided to go back, I went to Codecademy instead. I used Codecademy a few years back and had finished their HTML, CSS and JS courses. Just last month I finished their PHP course because I want to do Wordpress development. I need to put more time on that though but that’s beside the point.
At least for me, there’s a more polish feel in using Codecademy when compared to freeCodeCamp. Being a designer, I like that a lot. But that did not make me stay.
Though Codecademy offers better experience, it is fragmented. Courses are not stringed to together well making a student starting in web dev guessing what to do next. There is a Learning Plan feature, which is a solution to the said problem but you need a pro account for that. It costs $20 per month and I not comfortable with that.
freeCodecamp solves those two problems for me. It’s totally free and it maps your full path to becoming a full stack web developer. So that’s why I went back.