* feat: use legacy flag chore: reorder challenges fix: linter revert: server change feat: unblock new editor fix: proper order fix: 0-based order fix: broke the order feat: move tribute certification to its own block feat: split the old projects block into 4 fix: put all blocks in order chore: add intro text refactor: use block, not blockName in query fix: project progress indicator * fix: reorder new challenges/certs * fix: reorder legacy challenges * fix: reintroduce legacy certs * feat: add showNewCurriculum flag to env * chore: forgot sample.env * feat: use feature flag for display * fix: rename meta + dirs to match new blocks * fix: add new blocks to help-category-map * fix: update completion-modal for new GQL schema * test: duplicate title/id errors -> warnings * fix: update completion-modal to new GQL schema Mk2 * chore: re-order metas (again) * fix: revert super-block-intro changes The intro needs to show both legacy and new content. We need to decide which pages are created, rather than than what a page shows when rendered. * feat: move upcoming curriculum into own superblock * fix: handle one certification with two superBlocks * fix: remove duplicated intros * fix: remove duplicate projects from /settings * fix: drop 'two' from Responsive Web Design Two * chore: rename slug suffix from two to v2 * feat: control display of new curriculum * feat: control project paths shown on /settings * fix: use new project order for /settings This does mean that /settings will change before the release, but I don't think it's serious. All the projects are there, just not in the legacy order. * fix: claim/show cert button * chore: remove isLegacy Since we have legacy superblocks, we don't currently need individual blocks to be legacy * test: fix utils.test * fix: verifyCanClaim needs certification If Shaun removes the cert claim cards, maybe we can remove this entirely * fix: add hasEditableBoundaries flags where needed * chore: remove isUpcomingChange * chore: v2 -> 22 Co-authored-by: Oliver Eyton-Williams <ojeytonwilliams@gmail.com>
1.8 KiB
id, title, challengeType, dashedName
id | title | challengeType | dashedName |
---|---|---|---|
5dc2385ff86c76b9248c6eb7 | Step 5 | 0 | step-5 |
--description--
HTML5 has some elements that identify different content areas. These elements make your HTML easier to read and help with Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and accessibility.
Identify the main section of this page by adding a <main>
opening tag after the h1
element, and a </main>
closing tag after the p
element.
--hints--
Your main
element should have an opening tag. Opening tags have this syntax: <elementName>
.
assert(document.querySelector('main'));
Your main
element should have a closing tag. Closing tags have a /
just after the <
character.
assert(code.match(/<\/main\>/));
Your main
element's opening tag should be below the h1
element. You have them in the wrong order.
const collection = [...document.querySelectorAll('main,h1')].map(
(node) => node.nodeName
);
assert(collection.indexOf('H1') < collection.indexOf('MAIN'));
Your main
element's opening tag should be above the h2
element. You have them in the wrong order.
const collection = [...document.querySelectorAll('main,h2')].map(
(node) => node.nodeName
);
assert(collection.indexOf('MAIN') < collection.indexOf('H2'));
Your main
element's closing tag should be below the p
element. You have them in the wrong order.
const mainNode = document.querySelector('main');
const pNode = document.querySelector('p');
assert(
mainNode.contains(pNode) &&
pNode.textContent.toLowerCase().match(/click here to view more cat photos/)
);
--seed--
--seed-contents--
<html>
<body>
--fcc-editable-region--
<h1>CatPhotoApp</h1>
<h2>Cat Photos</h2>
<!-- TODO: Add link to cat photos -->
<p>Click here to view more cat photos.</p>
--fcc-editable-region--
</body>
</html>