Make more stupid little html shit because you can
literally like take back the web by Fighting the normalization of a website as a fancy polished thing. It can be whatever. You CAN make anything because. all you need to make shit on the web is. some stupid text. I cast magic spell: website
- <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
- <meta charset="utf-8">
- <title>piss</title>
- <html>
- <body>
- <h1>website title here</h1>
- <h2>Section title 1</h2>
- <p>Paragraph text Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. <a href="https:// crouton.net">Hyper link Nullam faucibus sodales sapien</a>, non vehicula quam cursus ut. </p>
- <h3>Sub-section title</h3>
- <p>Paragraph text Duis non odio ac lorem faucibus congue. Maecenas tortor turpis, pretium sed libero vitae, vehicula pulvinar enim. </p>
- <hr>
- <h2>Section title 2</h2>
- <p>Paragraph text Quisque porttitor eros et dui maximus, sed faucibus est finibus. Etiam id lacus vitae nibh egestas convallis. Nulla lectus sem, eleifend ut elit in, elementum imperdiet leo. </p>
- </body>
- </html>
[i know I'm preaching to the choir here but. I just think it's important to spread the idea that you can just start putting basic little layouts out there with basically no effort]
The one thing you really need to know about HTML is that it's a "markup" language. That means each elements you want to be [thing] needs to be "wrapped" in [thing].
Because all a website really is is a document. Like a word document. If you look at something like a word file under the hood, you'd see something really similar. This also means that pretty much anything you can do in word, you can do in html. Text size, the font, color, being center aligned. it's all there!
Think of the thing you'd want to do like you see in a word document, and then google "[thing] w3schools" That site has all the html tags, info on how they work, and even a little tester where you can futz around with code and see how exactly it changes the output.
Stuff like Codecademy is good for learning this, too, for free. It also has the little tester thingy where you can futz around and see how one thing affects another. You don't need to do all the lessons, even. Once you understand the "logic" of how a website is "built," you're pretty much good to go.
And since a website is just a text document, you can make it in any text editor! Notepad.exe, for example. Or Notepad++. Or VSCode. There's a ton of free options out there, which have all levels of tools and helping thingies.
Programming is like legos. You can make some neat stuff with only a few, simple pieces, but it takes a hot minute to learn the techniques to make the really wild stuff.
CSS crimes are just lego builds using illegal techniques.












