4.7 KiB
thallada.github.io
This is the latest version of my personal website. It is a static website built with Jekyll.
See it at http://www.hallada.net/.
Magic
Most of the development work of this website went into creating what I like to call "magic", or the dynamic background to my homepage. A few seconds after loading the page, a branching web of colored tendrils will grow in a random position on the page, followed soon after by other "spells" sprouting in random locations across the background. Clicking on the background will also initiate a starting point for a new spell to appear.
It is meant to represent the imaginative and infinite wonders of programming as described eloquently by Fred Brooks in one of my favorite quotes from him in his book The Mythical Man-Month, which is featured on the page.
A canvas element spans the entire background and my script leverages AnimationFrame to animate the construction of procedurally generated trees of B-splines for a random range of time. I adapted a large portion of the code from Maissian's tutorial on simulating vines, making it more random, colorful, and more CPU efficient.
It was really fun to tweak various variables in the script and see how the animation reacted. It didn't take much tweaking to get the lines to appear like lightning flashing in the distant background, or like cracks splitting the screen, or like growing forest of sprouting trees.
You can play around with these variables yourself on the /magic page which has sliders for tweaking the animations in realtime.
Layout & CSS
I use a grid system devised by Adam Kaplan and
with some pieces from Jorden Lev. It is
set-up by scratch in my main.css
. I decided on this so that I would not have
to load a huge framework like Bootstrap since I would only be using the grid
system out of it.
As an introduction to this system:
Wrap everything in a div element with the container
class.
<div class="container"></div>
To create rows add div elements with the row
and clearfix
classes.
<div class="container">
<div class="row clearfix"></div>
</div>
To create columns add div elements with the column
class. Then add a class
to describe the width of the column with respect to the container. The possible
widths are:
CSS class name | width percentage |
---|---|
full |
100% |
two-thirds |
66.7% |
half |
50% |
third |
33.3% |
fourth |
25% |
three-fourths |
75% |
These are purely for convienence. A more precise width can be specified in the
CSS if desired with the width
attribute.
<div class="container">
<div class="row clearfix">
<div class="column full"></div>
</div>
</div>
Columns stack up right to left. To force a column out of order all the way to
the right use the flow-opposite
class on the column (but remain first on
smaller screens).
<div class="container">
<div class="row clearfix">
<div class="column half"></div>
<div class="column half flow-opposite"></div>
</div>
</div>
To hide an element on mobile phones add the class hide-mobile
. To hide on
desktop, use hide-desktop
instead.
<div class="container">
<div class="row clearfix">
<div class="column half hide-mobile"></div>
<div class="column half hide-desktop"></div>
</div>
</div>
I had an issue with displaying elements on desktop that had the class "hide-mobile", so you can add the following classes to make sure they redisplay in the right display type correctly:
hide-mobile-block
hide-mobile-inline-block
hide-mobile-inline
hide-deskop-block
hide-desktop-inline-block
hide-desktop-inline
I could add more for each display
property, but I'm trying to find a better
way of fixing this without adding these second classes.
Another note: I use box-sizing (as suggested by Paul Irish), which I think makes dealing with sizing elements a lot more sane.
Attributions
Book designed by Nherwin Ardoña from the Noun Project.