yoanad / datavis-2020-group

Home Page:https://yoanad.github.io/datavis-2020-group/

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DataVis 2020 Group Project

Technologies

  • Styling & UI: Bulma

Used this as a template for a simple webpack 4 starter project.

Table of Contents

Usage

Install npm dependencies

 npm install 

To start the development server

npm start

To build for production

npm run build

To preview the production build

npm run preview

Deploy to github pages

npm run build
npm run deploy

The page will be available on https://yoanad.github.io/datavis-2020-group/.

FAQ

How to load fonts

If you don't support Opera Mini, browsers support the .woff format. Its newer version .woff2, is widely supported by modern browsers and can be a good alternative.

If you decide to use only this format you can load the fonts in a similar manner to images.

In your webpack.dev.js and webpack.prod.js add the following

module.exports = {
    // ..
    module: {
        rules: [
            // ..
            {
                test: /\.woff$/,
                loader: 'url-loader',
                options: {
                    // Limit at 50k. Above that it emits separate files
                    limit: 50000,
                    // url-loader sets mimetype if it's passed.
                    // Without this it derives it from the file extension
                    mimetype: 'application/font-woff',
                    // Output below fonts directory
                    name: './fonts/[name].[ext]',
                },
            }
            // ..
        ]
    }
    // ..
};

And let's say your font is in the folder assets with the name pixel.woff

You can add it and use it in index.scss as

@font-face {
    font-family: "Pixel";
    src: url('./../assets/pixel.woff') format('woff');
}

.body{
    font-family: 'Pixel', sans-serif;
}

If you would like to support all kinds of font types, remove the woff rule we previously added to webpack.dev.js and webpack.prod.js and add the following

module.exports = {
    // ..
    module: {
        rules: [
            // ..
            {
                test: /\.(ttf|eot|woff|woff2)$/,
                loader: 'file-loader',
                options: {
                    name: 'fonts/[name].[ext]',
                },
            }
            // ..
        ]
    }
    // ..
};

And assuming you have your fonts in the directory assets with names pixel.woff, pixel.ttf, pixel.eot , etc.

You can add it and use it in index.scss as

@font-face {
    font-family: 'Pixel';
    src: url('./../assets/pixel.woff2') format('woff2'),
    url('./../assets/pixel.woff') format('woff'),
    url('./../assets/pixel.eot') format('embedded-opentype'),
    url('./../assets/pixel.ttf') format('truetype');
    /* Add other formats as you see fit */
}

How to load images

In JavaScript

You can require an image from JavaScript like

const myImage = require('./assets/icon.png');

If the image size in bytes is smaller than 8192you, myImage will be a string with the encoded image path such as

data:image/svg+xml;base64,bW9kdWxlLmV4cG9ydHMgPSBfX3dlYnBhY2tfcHVibGljX3BhdGhfXyArICJhc3NldHMvaW1hZ2VzL3RpY2stQ3lydkhSdi5zdmciOw==

If the image size is larger than 8192 it will be a string with the url to the image such as

src/assets/icon.png?hash=5b1f36bc41ab31f5b801

This limit is set so images like icons are not loaded through a request but you can force the loader to give you image urls always by doing the following but should not be necessary. The limit works 90% of the time.

const myImage = require('!!url!/assets/icon.png');

In index.html

If you would like to include an image on your index.html file, place the path of the image in a webpack require statement<%= require(imagePath) %>.

  <img class="splash-title__img"
                     src="<%= require('./src/assets/logo-on-dark-bg.png') %>"
                     alt="webpack logo"></a>

About

https://yoanad.github.io/datavis-2020-group/


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