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FREECODECAMP - CAT PHOTO APP

Building your own cat photo app using HTML

STEPS

✅ Step 1

Change the text of the h1 element below from Hello World to CatPhotoApp and watch the change in the browser preview.

✅ Step 2

Only use one h1 element per page and place lower importance headings below higher importance headings.

Below the h1 element, add an h2 element with this text:

Cat Photos

✅ Step 3

The p element is used to create a paragraph of text on websites. Create a p element below your h2 element and give it the following text:

See more cat photos in our gallery.

✅ Step 4

Add a comment above the p element with this text:

TODO: Add link to cat photos

✅ Step 5

Identify the main section of this page by adding a

opening tag before the h1 element, and a closing tag after the p element.

✅ Step 6

The h1 element, h2 element and the comment are indented two spaces more than the main element in the code below. Use the space bar on your keyboard to add two more spaces in front of the p element so that it is indented properly as well.

✅ Step 7

You can add images to your website by using the img element. img elements have an opening tag without a closing tag. A tag for an element without a closing tag is known as a self-closing tag.

Add an img element below the p element. At this point, no image will show up in the browser.

✅ Step 8

Inside the existing img element, add a src attribute with this URL:

https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/relaxing-cat.jpg

✅ Step 9

Inside the img element, add an alt attribute with this text:

A cute orange cat lying on its back

✅ Step 10

Add an anchor element after the paragraph that links to https://freecatphotoapp.com. At this point, the link won’t show up in the preview.

✅ Step 11

Add the anchor text link to cat pictures to the anchor element. This will become the link's text.

✅ Step 12

In the text of your p element, turn the words cat photos into a link by adding opening and closing anchor (a) tags around these words. Then set the href attribute to https://freecatphotoapp.com

✅ Step 13

Now that you turned the text cat photos inside the p element into a link, you don't need the second link below the p element. Delete the entire anchor element below the p element.

✅ Step 14

Add a target attribute with the value _blank to the anchor (a) element's opening tag, so that the link opens in a new tab.

✅ Step 15

Turn the image into a link by surrounding it with necessary element tags. Use https://freecatphotoapp.com as the anchor's href attribute value.

✅ Step 16

Take your h2, comment, p, and anchor (a) elements and nest them in a section element.

✅ Step 17

It is time to add a new section. Add a second section element below the existing section element.

✅ Step 18

Within the second section element, add a new h2 element with the text Cat Lists.

✅ Step 19

When you add a lower rank heading element to the page, it's implied that you're starting a new subsection.

After the last h2 element of the second section element, add an h3 element with this text:

Things cats love:

✅ Step 20

To create an unordered list of items, you can use the ul element.

After the h3 element with the Things cats love: text, add an unordered list (ul) element. Note that nothing will be displayed at this point.

✅ Step 21

Within the ul element nest three list items to display three things cats love:

cat nip laser pointers lasagna

✅ Step 22

After the unordered list, add a new image with a src attribute value set to:

https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/lasagna.jpg

And its alt attribute value to:

A slice of lasagna on a plate.

✅ Step 23

The figure element represents self-contained content and will allow you to associate an image with a caption.

Nest the image you just added within a figure element.

✅ Step 24

After the image nested in the figure element, add a figcaption element with text set to:

Cats love lasagna.

✅ Step 25

To place emphasis on a specific word or phrase, you can use the em element.

Emphasize the word love in the figcaption element by wrapping it in an emphasis em element.

✅ Step 26

After the figure element, add another h3 element with the text:

Top 3 things cats hate:

✅ Step 27

The code for an ordered list (ol) is similar to an unordered list, but list items in an ordered list are numbered when displayed.

After the second section element's last h3 element, add an ordered list with these three list items:

flea treatment thunder other cats

✅ Step 28

After the ordered list, add another figure element.

✅ Step 29

Inside the figure element you just added, nest an img element with a src attribute set to https://cdn.freecodecamp.org/curriculum/cat-photo-app/cats.jpg.

✅ Step 30

To improve accessibility of the image you added, add an alt attribute with the text:

Five cats looking around a field.

✅ Step 31

After the last img element, add a figcaption element with the text Cats hate other cats.

✅ Step 32

The strong element is used to indicate that some text is of strong importance or urgent.

In the figcaption you just added, indicate that hate is of strong importance by wrapping it in a strong element.

✅ Step 33

It is time to add a new section. Add a third section element below the second section element.

✅ Step 34

Inside the third section element, add an h2 element with the text:

Cat Form

✅ Step 35

Now you will add a web form to collect information from users.

The form element is used to get information from a user like their name, email, and other details.

After the Cat Form heading, add a form element.

✅ Step 36

The action attribute indicates where form data should be sent.

In the example, action="/submit-url" tells the browser that the form data should be sent to the path /submit-url.

Add an action attribute with the value https://freecatphotoapp.com/submit-cat-photo to the form element.

✅ Step 37

The input element allows you several ways to collect data from a web form. Like img elements, input elements are self-closing and do not need closing tags.

Nest an input element in the form element.

✅ Step 38

There are many kinds of inputs you can create using the type attribute. You can easily create a password field, reset button, or a control to let users select a file from their computer.

Create a text field to get text input from a user by adding the type attribute with the value text to the input element.

✅ Step 39

Add the name attribute with the value catphotourl to your text field.

✅ Step 40

Add the placeholder text cat photo URL to your input element.

✅ Step 41

To prevent a user from submitting your form when required information is missing, you need to add the required attribute to an input element. There's no need to set a value to the required attribute. Instead, just add the word required to the input element, making sure there is space between it and other attributes.

✅ Step 42

The button element is used to create a clickable button.

Add a button element with the text Submit below the input element. The default behavior of clicking a form button without any attributes submits the form to the location specified in the form's action attribute.

✅ Step 43

Even though you added your button below the text input, they appear next to each other on the page. That's because both input and button elements are inline elements, which don't appear on new lines.

The button you added will submit the form by default. However, relying on default behavior may cause confusion. Add the type attribute with the value submit to the button to make it clear that it is a submit button.

✅ Step 44

Remember that input elements are self-closing.

Before the text input, add a radio button with the option set as:

Indoor

✅ Step 45

In the example, clicking on the word "cat" will also select the radio button.

Nest your radio button inside a label element.

✅ Step 46

Add an id attribute with the value indoor to the radio button. When elements have multiple attributes, the order of the attributes doesn't matter.

✅ Step 47

Create another radio button below the first one. Nest it inside a label element with Outdoor as the label text. Give the radio button an id attribute with outdoor as the value.

✅ Step 48

Add the name attribute with the value indoor-outdoor to both radio buttons.

✅ Step 49

If you select the Indoor radio button and submit the form, the form data for the button is based on its name and value attributes. Since your radio buttons do not have a value attribute, the form data will include indoor-outdoor=on, which is not useful when you have multiple buttons.

Add a value attribute to both radio buttons. For convenience, set the button's value attribute to the same value as its id attribute.

✅ Step 50

The fieldset element is used to group related inputs and labels together in a web form. fieldset elements are block-level elements, meaning that they appear on a new line.

Nest the Indoor and Outdoor radio buttons within a fieldset element, and don't forget to indent the radio buttons.

✅ Step 51

The legend element acts as a caption for the content in the fieldset element. It gives users context about what they should enter into that part of the form.

Add a legend element with the text Is your cat an indoor or outdoor cat? above both of the radio buttons.

✅ Step 52

Next, you are going to add some new form input elements, so add another fieldset element directly below the current fieldset element.

✅ Step 53

Add a legend element with the text What's your cat's personality? inside the second fieldset element.

✅ Step 54

Forms commonly use checkboxes for questions that may have more than one answer. The input element with a type attribute set to checkbox creates a checkbox.

Under the legend element you just added, add an input with its type attribute set to checkbox and give it the option of:

Loving

✅ Step 55

Add an id attribute with the value loving to the checkbox input.

✅ Step 56

Associate the text Loving with the checkbox by nesting only the text Loving in a label element and giving it an appropriate for attribute.

✅ Step 57

Add the name attribute with the value personality to the checkbox input element.

While you won't notice this in the browser, doing this makes it easier for a server to process your web form, especially when there are multiple checkboxes.

✅ Step 58

Add another checkbox after the one you just added. The id attribute value should be lazy and the name attribute value should be the same as the last checkbox.

Also add a label element to the right of the new checkbox with the text Lazy. Make sure to associate the label element with the new checkbox using the for attribute.

✅ Step 59

Add a final checkbox after the previous one with an id attribute value of energetic. The name attribute should be the same as the previous checkbox.

Also add a label element to the right of the new checkbox with text Energetic. Make sure to associate the label element with the new checkbox.

✅ Step 60

Like radio buttons, form data for selected checkboxes are name / value attribute pairs. While the value attribute is optional, it's best practice to include it with any checkboxes or radio buttons on the page.

Add a value attribute to each checkbox. For convenience, set each checkbox's value attribute to the same value as its id attribute.

✅ Step 61

There's no need to set a value to the checked attribute. Instead, just add the word checked to the input element, making sure there is space between it and other attributes.

Make the first radio button and the first checkbox selected by default.

✅ Step 62

The footer element is used to define a footer for a document or section. A footer typically contains information about the author of the document, copyright data, links to terms of use, contact information, and more.

After the main element, add a footer element.

✅ Step 63

Nest a p element with the text No Copyright - freeCodeCamp.org within the footer element.

✅ Step 64

Turn the existing freeCodeCamp.org text into a link by enclosing it in an anchor (a) element. The href attribute should be set to https://www.freecodecamp.org.

✅ Step 65

Notice that everything you've added to the page so far is inside the body element. All page content elements that should be rendered to the page go inside the body element. However, other important information goes inside the head element.

The head element is used to contain metadata about the document, such as its title, links to stylesheets, and scripts. Metadata is information about the page that isn't displayed directly on the page.

Add a head element above the body element.

✅ Step 66

The title element determines what browsers show in the title bar or tab for the page.

Add a title element within the head element using the text below:

CatPhotoApp

✅ Step 67

Notice that the entire contents of the page are nested within an html element. The html element is the root element of an HTML page and wraps all content on the page.

You can also specify the language of your page by adding the lang attribute to the html element.

Add the lang attribute with the value en to the opening html tag to specify that the language of the page is English.

✅ Step 68

All pages should begin with . This special string is known as a declaration and ensures the browser tries to meet industry-wide specifications.

tells browsers that the document is an HTML5 document which is the latest version of HTML.

Add this declaration as the first line of the code.

✅ Step 69

Inside the head element, nest a meta element with an attribute named charset. Set to the value to utf-8 which tells the browser how to encode characters for the page.

Note that meta elements are self-closing.

With that last change, you have completed the Cat Photo App project. Congratulations!

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