# Temp notes ## React to height change ### Get current height of page To create content based on viewport height change you should use an event listener: `window.addEventListener`. A list of all events you can listen for is here: The current height can be obtained from `window.innerHeight`. You should add `created` and `destroyed` to the script, and create a method to do something on the trigger: ```javascript export default { data() { return { viewportHeight: window.innerHeight, }; }, created() { window.addEventListener("resize", this.updateHeight); }, destroyed() { window.removeEventListener("resize", this.updateHeight); }, methods: { updateHeight() { this.viewportHeight = window.innerHeight; }, }, }; ``` This can be useful if you need to pass the current height to a prop for an image component that you might want to fill the page: ```html ``` You can also get the height in the css. This way you can have an image set its own width or height as css parameters. ```css .full-screen { height: calc(100vh - 64px); } ``` You might also want to add browser compatibility options: Opera: `height: -o-calc(100% - 65px);` Google/Safari: `height: -webkit-calc(100% - 65px);` ### Get current height of an object Simiarly, you can add a watcher to get the width of any element. You should add a css class to the object you want to get the width of. Then you can use a `querySelector` to get it: ```javascript getBackgroundWidth() { var background = document.querySelector("#backgroundsvg"); this.backgroundWidth = background.clientWidth; } ``` Documentation for `querySelector`: You can see all the methods and properties for document here: ## Using `` to fill the page `fill-height` is useful for child components if you want them to fill to the height of the parent. To make a fullscreen element use fluid with 0 margins, and set the height to 100vh. Then any children `` can use the `fill-height` prop. ## v-for for n times repetition You can repeat things n times using a `v-for`: ```html ``` Use `` to get content like - screenshot of central content with pipe background -webkit-background-size: cover; -moz-background-size: cover; -o-background-size: cover; background-size: cover; ## Images as backgrounds You can use `background-size: cover;` in the css to dynamically have a background image adjust to the viewport. Demo: You can use aditional controls to set how the image should scale itself: Cropping images with `object-fit: cover;` ### SVG elements as a background You can use an svg (from envato) as a fullscreen background image. To do this you should decide if you need a transparent appbar or not. If you do not need a transparent appbar: - Set an image - with `position: absolute;` - with `height: calc(100vh - 64px)` ## Images that autoscale (zoom) This is a good example on how you can dynamically zoom in/out of an image: Quick method: To set an image to auto scale (zoom style) Use `max-width` to the value you want the image to be Use `width: 100%;` Use `height: auto;` Use `max-height` to the value you want the image to be ## Using envato EPS Open the EPS file in Graphic. Hide and delete all the layers you don't need. When finished, create a new canvas and copy and paste the images to it. Position it accordingly and resize everything. Export as svg and edit the svg to remove the height and width. ## Transparent appbar You can have the appbar be transparent to have a background image fullscreen. To do this you should: - Set an image - with `position: absolute;` - ## Stripe appbar menu ## React to height change ### Get current height of page To create content based on viewport height change you should use an event listener: `window.addEventListener`. A list of all events you can listen for is here: The current height can be obtained from `window.innerHeight`. You should add `created` and `destroyed` to the script, and create a method to do something on the trigger: ```javascript export default { data() { return { viewportHeight: window.innerHeight, }; }, created() { window.addEventListener("resize", this.updateHeight); }, destroyed() { window.removeEventListener("resize", this.updateHeight); }, methods: { updateHeight() { this.viewportHeight = window.innerHeight; }, }, }; ``` This can be useful if you need to pass the current height to a prop for an image component that you might want to fill the page: ```html ``` You can also get the height in the css. This way you can have an image set its own width or height as css parameters. ```css .full-screen { height: calc(100vh - 64px); } ``` You might also want to add browser compatibility options: Opera: `height: -o-calc(100% - 65px);` Google/Safari: `height: -webkit-calc(100% - 65px);` ### Get current height of an object Simiarly, you can add a watcher to get the width of any element. You should add a css class to the object you want to get the width of. Then you can use a `querySelector` to get it: ```javascript getBackgroundWidth() { var background = document.querySelector("#backgroundsvg"); this.backgroundWidth = background.clientWidth; } ``` Documentation for `querySelector`: You can see all the methods and properties for document here: ## Using `` to fill the page `fill-height` is useful for child components if you want them to fill to the height of the parent. To make a fullscreen element use fluid with 0 margins, and set the height to 100vh. Then any children `` can use the `fill-height` prop. ## v-for for n times repetition You can repeat things n times using a `v-for`: ```html ``` Use `` to get content like - screenshot of central content with pipe background -webkit-background-size: cover; -moz-background-size: cover; -o-background-size: cover; background-size: cover; ## Images as backgrounds You can use `background-size: cover;` in the css to dynamically have a background image adjust to the viewport. Demo: You can use aditional controls to set how the image should scale itself: Cropping images with `object-fit: cover;` ### SVG elements as a background You can use an svg (from envato) as a fullscreen background image. To do this you should decide if you need a transparent appbar or not. If you do not need a transparent appbar: - Set an image - with `position: absolute;` - with `height: calc(100vh - 64px)` ## Images that autoscale (zoom) This is a good example on how you can dynamically zoom in/out of an image: Quick method: To set an image to auto scale (zoom style) Use `max-width` to the value you want the image to be Use `width: 100%;` Use `height: auto;` Use `max-height` to the value you want the image to be ## Using envato EPS Open the EPS file in Graphic. Hide and delete all the layers you don't need. When finished, create a new canvas and copy and paste the images to it. Position it accordingly and resize everything. Export as svg and edit the svg to remove the height and width. ## Fullscreen image as a background The image should set a class: ```html ``` ### Transparent appbar You can have the appbar be transparent to have a background image fullscreen. ```html ``` ### Adjust image position to match that of dynamic appbar To adjust the image to account for the height of the appbar dynamically you should use media queries and vuetify sass variables: ```scss img.new-background-image { height: calc(100vh); width: calc(100vw); position: absolute; @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'md-and-up')} { top: -64px; } @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'sm-and-down')} { top: -56px; } } ``` Here we offset the image from the top by the size of the appbar based on the viewports. Alternatively if you don't want the image to extend behind the appbar don't adjust the `top` attribute. You should instead subtract the height of the appbar from the image: ```scss img.new-background-image { width: calc(100vw); position: absolute; @media screen and (min-width: $background-width) { object-fit: scale-down; object-position: right; } @media screen and (max-width: $background-width) { object-fit: cover; object-position: left; } @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'md-and-up')} { height: calc(100vh - 64px); } @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'sm-and-down')} { height: calc(100vh - 56px); } } ``` ### Using CSS media queries for dynamic classes The appbar will adjust its own height based on the viewport. On medium and above it will be 64px, on small and below it will be 56px. On the image itself you should set a class. This class should set the `height` and `width` to 100% of the viewheight/viewwidth and `position: absolute`. You should set a `$background-width` variable - this should be the width of the image. We can use this to know if the current screen is less than the width of the actual image and apply alternative styling. We can use media queries to set the position of the image on different background widths: ```javascript $background-width: 795px; img.new-background-image { height: calc(100vh); width: calc(100vw); position: absolute; @media screen and (min-width: $background-width) { object-fit: scale-down; object-position: right; } @media screen and (max-width: $background-width) { object-fit: cover; object-position: left; } @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'md-and-up')} { top: -64px; } @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'sm-and-down')} { top: -56px; } } ``` To have an SVG image automatically adjust itself for dynamic viewports: #### Fullscreen Set `object-fit` to `scale-down` and `object-position` to `right`. This will ensure that the image fills the viewport entirely, and is algined to the right. #### On mobile breakpoint Set `object-fit` to `cover` and `object-position` to `left`. Using `cover` will ensure the image _fills_ the page and we align it to the left/right for scrolling. Setting the `object-position` to `left` will make sure the image cuts from the right hand side (and vice-versa). ## Stripe appbar menu Example: Install with yarn: `yarn add vue-stripe-menu` Add to `main.js`: ```javascript import Vue from "Vue"; import VueStripeMenu from "vue-stripe-menu"; Vue.use(VueStripeMenu); // Import build styles import "vue-stripe-menu/dist/vue-stripe-menu.css"; ``` You should create Vue components for the content you want to display on hover. To use these in the appbar component, import the components: ```javascript import Welcome from "./views/stripe-appbar/Welcome"; import WelcomeSecondary from "./views/stripe-appbar/WelcomeSecondary"; ``` Then you should create a menu object in `data`: ```javascript data() { return { menu: [ { title: "Welcome", dropdown: "welcome", content: Welcome, secondary: WelcomeSecondary, element: "span" }, { title: "Welcome", dropdown: "welcome", content: Welcome, secondary: WelcomeSecondary } ] }; } ``` Then in the html you should create the appbar layout you need: ```html ``` The `ref` is so you can refer to the menu object in javascript using `this.$header` later on. The menu prop should point to the list which contains the objects for each component you want to render. You can use css to control how the components should be rendered: ```css .content { padding: 20px; } .content--secondary { padding: 20px; } ``` To control the width, you should set the `width` in the css in the components themsevles: ```html Welcome Secondary Content ``` To have two menu content sections top and bottom: use `content` and `secondary`. To have two menu content sections side by side: create the full layout in the Vue component. If you just want a link and no component as a dropdown, you should reference a `routerLink` object inside the list's object. ```javascript { title: "Playground", routerLink: { name: "Playground" } } ``` Then you can use a `` component with a `v-if="data.item.routerLink"`: ```html ``` Using the title prop controls what text should be rendered for each object's title. We can use an if with a router-link to control whether it should be a link or not. To control the scss variables you should create an appbar.scss file in the `./scss/` folder. This file should override the default scss variables of the component. ```scss @import "../scss/_variables.scss"; $vsm-menu-link-height: 35px !default; $vsm-color: $mainColor !default; $vsm-color-hover: $mainColor !default; $vsm-media: 768px !default; $vsm-menu-border-radius: 15px !default; $vsm-menu-transform-content: 150px !default; @import "~vue-stripe-menu/src/scss/index"; ``` We can import the default `_variables.scss` to use the font colour variable. Once we have overwritten the variables we should import the default scss file. Then in your `main.js` file you should import this scss file instead: ```javascript import "./scss/appbar.scss"; ``` You can use this file to set the breakpoint width that Vuetify uses. If your appbar changes on sm and below, you can set the `$vsm-media` variable to this pixel viewport. To allow the appbar to function in a Vuetify appbar component, you should set the `z-index` in the css of the element: ```html ``` ## Getting sass to talk to javascript ## Using Vuetify Sass variables for dynamic css ## Using SASS variables for viewport Vuetify has SASS variables that you can use in your css blocks. To control CSS based on the viewport, you can either set the class dynamically, or you can use SCSS itself. You can use `$display-breakpoints` with a `map-get` in the sass to set a css property dynamically (check the documentation for the options that `$display-breakpoints` offers). For example, you can apply css to a class based on whether or not the viewport is met: ```scss img.new-background-image { height: calc(100vh); position: absolute; right: 0; top: -64px; @media #{map-get($display-breakpoints, 'sm-and-down')} { left: 0px; } } ``` If you want to break on a specific width (say when the background image width is met to align it), you can use a scss variable: ```scss $background-width: 795px; img.new-background-image { height: calc(100vh); position: absolute; right: 0; top: -64px; @media screen and (max-width: $background-width) { left: 0px; } } ``` ## Using custom scss files You can use custom scss files to set variables/classes to be used in multiple projects. Create an scss file in `./src/scss` with a leader underscore. In this file you can scss as normal. If you're setting scss variables for a custom project remember to import the scss file at the end so your values will be applied. ### Import scss files Use `@import`. Then you can access the variables directly. ```scss @import "../scss/_variables.scss"; ``` ## Fontawesome in Vue If using Vuetify you can use the `` component instead and register Fontawesome as a plugin ### Installation `yarn add @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core` `yarn add @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons` `yarn add @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome` `yarn add @fortawesome/free-regular-svg-icons` In `main.js` you should import the package: ```javascript import { FontAwesomeIcon } from "@fortawesome/vue-fontawesome"; Vue.component("font-awesome-icon", FontAwesomeIcon); ``` Then in any component you should import the library and the icon name you want: ```javascript import { library } from "@fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core"; import { faSpaceShuttle } from "@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons"; library.add(faSpaceShuttle); ``` Then in the html you can use the component and pass the `icon` prop: ```html ``` ## Bootstrap new package `npx @vue/cli create base-examples` `vue add vuetify` ## Rotate image 360 degrees Create a css class that defines the animation. This should define what animation, the duration and any additional properties you want to apply to a spin. ```scss .space-image { animation: spin 30s linear infinite; -webkit-animation: spin 30s linear infinite; -moz-animation: spin 30s linear infinite; } ``` Write the keyframes that specify what the final position should be for a spin animation: ```scss @-moz-keyframes spin { 100% { -moz-transform: rotate(360deg); } } @-webkit-keyframes spin { 100% { -webkit-transform: rotate(360deg); } } @keyframes spin { 100% { -webkit-transform: rotate(360deg); transform: rotate(360deg); } } ``` ### Pause on hover To pause on hover you can use a css selector: ```scss .space-image { animation-play-state: running; animation: spin 30s linear infinite; -webkit-animation: spin 30s linear infinite; -moz-animation: spin 30s linear infinite; } .space-image:hover { animation-play-state: paused; } ``` ### Pause as default, run on hover To resume on hover you can simply set the animations state to paused: ```scss .space-image { animation: spin 40s linear infinite; -webkit-animation: spin 40s linear infinite; -moz-animation: spin 40s linear infinite; animation-play-state: running; } .space-image:hover { -webkit-animation-play-state: paused; -moz-animation-play-state: paused; -o-animation-play-state: paused; animation-play-state: paused; } ``` ### Height of container Because the image is rotating, you need to make sure the container has enough height. A 650px image will need 920px height and width to allow the square image enough room to rotate. One way is to set a `.full-screen` sass class that accounts for this: ```scss .full-screen { min-height: calc(100vh); max-height: 1400px; } ``` Here the max-height is 1400px, which accounts for the height of elements above the image. This will make sure the page has enough height (for rendering a background etc) for the rotation. ## CSS Selectors Some selectors you can use with the `.class-name:selector` syntax: ```text :hover - when the mouse cursor hovers over the element :focus - which reacts to user input :active - when the element is clicked :target - when a different element is clicked ``` ## SVG images in v-img If you want to use an svg `` you need to set the `aspect-ratio`, `max-height` and `max-width` props. This is because `` uses `background-image` to render the underlying image. ```html ``` ## SCSS/SASS ### Getting started guide ### Using variables ## Dynamic Appbar We can set two different appbars which can change on the viewport. You should use ``, `` and `` inside the ``. You can use the helper classes `hidden-sm-and-down` etc to display a row for different viewports. Example of a dynamic appbar: ### Subcomponents You can use `` for a title in the appbar: ```html

Savvy Firebase Tutorial

``` You can use `` for a hamburger button (for mobile layouts): ```html ``` ## To Do Organise these notes! Document all up and move into firebase.md Do waves/headers with backgrounds Do a fullscreen blob landing page Do Tailwind layout (moveable side content) Do (using clippath on an image with an overlay colour?) Do Liquidlight (using big headers) Do (use 100vh on background image as in playground with transparent appbar) Position a triangle top right as in And position random blobs as in More images: Do buttons: Doc setting an image as background without transparent appbar Should show how to dynamically change height and left/right based on viewport (shorter appbar on small) Tomorrow: - Finish appbar (modal to popout)