An Open Source Website Where Developer's Can Get Pre-Designed Button's CSS Sheet .Just Can Copy the Design and Implement It
This project is built using the following technologies:
-
HTML: HTML stands for HyperText Markup Language. It's a markup language that's used to design web pages. HTML is made up of a series of elements that tell the browser how to display the content.
-
CSS: CSS is the acronym of “Cascading Style Sheets”. CSS is a computer language for laying out and structuring web pages (HTML or XML). This language contains coding elements and is composed of these “cascading style sheets” which are equally called CSS files
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JS: JavaScript, often abbreviated as JS, is a programming language and core technology of the World Wide Web, alongside HTML and CSS. As of 2023, 98.7% of websites use JavaScript on the client side for webpage behavior, often incorporating third-party libraries.
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Bootstrap: Bootstrap is a free and open-source CSS framework directed at responsive, mobile-first front-end web development. It contains HTML, CSS and JavaScript-based design templates for typography, forms, buttons, navigation, and other interface components.
- Create a File In design_button Sub-Directory
- CSS File Should Be Your Github Username
<div class="col-12 col-md-3 main-row">
<div class=" box-main">
<a href="{CSS File Link}">
<button id="{github-username}">Button </button>
</a>
<br />
<p1 class="designed-by">{Name Of The Designer}</p1>
<div>
<a href="{Github Account Link}">
<img src="./assets/github.png" class="img-github">
</a>
<a href="{Linkdin Account Link}">
<img src="./assets/linkedin.png" class="img-linkedin">
</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
- Use Your Github Username As The Button Id And Css File Name
- If You Have Contributed For Multiple Button Use userrname-1/userrname-2
- Redirect To The CSS File Of The Button
- Make Sure To Include Your Name/Github/Linkedin
Local installation Guide Video # - Guide
- Click on the "Fork" button in the top right corner of the repository page.
- This will create a copy of the repository in your GitHub account.
- Open a terminal on your local machine.
- Use the
git clone
command to clone your forked repository to your local machine.git clone https://github.com/your-username/repository.git cd repository
- Create a Branch
- Create a new branch:
git checkout -b branch-name
- Create a new branch:
- Open the Markdown file and make your changes.
- Save changes and commit:
git add . git commit -m "Describe changes"
- Push changes to your fork:
git push origin branch-name
- Visit your fork on GitHub.
- Switch to your branch.
- Click "New Pull Request."
- Ensure the base repository and branch are correct.
- Add a title and description.
- Click "Create Pull Request."
- Wait for review and merge by repository maintainers.
- Periodically sync your fork:
```bash
git fetch upstream
git checkout main
git merge upstream/main
git push origin main
```