From cbb0397dae3c56e9ed5b68df708922663d05ad58 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Quincy Larson Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 17:44:53 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] replace evernote links with more reliable imgur links --- seed/challenges/bootstrap.json | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/seed/challenges/bootstrap.json b/seed/challenges/bootstrap.json index 4211392b8a..3f4d258a47 100644 --- a/seed/challenges/bootstrap.json +++ b/seed/challenges/bootstrap.json @@ -347,7 +347,7 @@ "description": [ "Normally, your button elements are only as wide as the text that they contain. By making them block elements, your button will stretch to fill your page's entire horizontal space.", "This image illustrates the difference between inline elements and block-level elements:", - "\"An", + "\"An", "Note that these buttons still need the btn class.", "Add Bootstrap's btn-block class to your Bootstrap button." ], @@ -700,7 +700,7 @@ "description": [ "Bootstrap uses a responsive grid system, which makes it easy to put elements into rows and specify each element's relative width. Most of Bootstrap's classes can be applied to a div element.", "Here's a diagram of how Bootstrap's 12-column grid layout works:", - "", + "\"an", "Note that in this illustration, the col-md-* class is being used. Here, md means medium, and * is a number specifying how many columns wide the element should be. In this case, the column width of an element on a medium-sized screen, such as a laptop, is being specified.", "In the Cat Photo App that we're building, we'll use col-xs-*, where xs means extra small (like an extra-small mobile phone screen), and * is the number of columns specifying how many columns wide the element should be.", "Put the Like, Info and Delete buttons side-by-side by nesting all three of them within one <div class=\"row\"> element, then each of them within a <div class=\"col-xs-4\"> element.", @@ -895,7 +895,7 @@ "description": [ "You can use use spans to create inline elements. Remember when we used the btn-block class to make the button fill the entire row?", "This image illustrates the difference between inline elements and block-level elements:", - "\"An", + "\"An", "By using the span element, you can put several elements together, and even style different parts of the same element differently.", "Nest the word \"love\" in your \"Things cats love\" element below within a span element. Then give that span the class text-danger to make the text red.", "Here's how you would do this with the \"Top 3 things cats hate\" element: <p>Top 3 things cats <span class = \"text-danger\">hate</span></p>" @@ -997,7 +997,7 @@ "We will make a simple heading for our Cat Photo App by putting them in the same row.", "Remember, Bootstrap uses a responsive grid system, which makes it easy to put elements into rows and specify each element's relative width. Most of Bootstrap's classes can be applied to a div element.", "Here's a diagram of how Bootstrap's 12-column grid layout works:", - "", + "\"an", "Note that in this illustration, the col-md-* class is being used. Here, md means medium, and * is a number specifying how many columns wide the element should be. In this case, the column width of an element on a medium-sized screen, such as a laptop, is being specified.", "In the Cat Photo App that we're building, we'll use col-xs-*, where xs means extra small (like an extra-small mobile phone screen), and * is the number of columns specifying how many columns wide the element should be.", "Nest your first image and your h2 element within a single <div class=\"row\"> element. Nest your h2 text within a <div class=\"col-xs-8\"> and your image in a <div class=\"col-xs-4\"> so that they are on the same line.",