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JavaScript Portfolio Site with GitHub Codespaces and Copilot

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Create, customize and deploy your own portfolio website in minutes.

In this template repository we have the development environment and base set and ready to go. So that you can immediately launch your Codespace environment and start customizing your site using Copilot to help you write code faster.

  • Who is this for? Anyone looking to create a portfolio site, learn web development, or test out Codespaces.
  • How much experience do you need? Zero. You decide how much you want to customize based on your experience, and time available.
  • Tools needed: None. No need to install anything! All you need is a web browser.
  • Prerequisites: None. This template includes your development environment and deployable web app for you to create your own site.

About this portfolio template

In this "choose your own adventure" template portfolio, we have a React based web application ready for you to easily customize and deploy using only your web browser.

JavaScript profile web application

Quick Start

  1. Click the Use this Template button and then Create a new repository as can be seen in the image below. Note: Make sure you've signed in to GitHub otherwise, you wouldn't see the Use this Template button. JavaScript profile web application
  2. Select the repository owner (e.g. your GitHub account)
  3. Enter a unique name for your new repository
  4. Click the Code button
  5. Click Create Codespace on main button
  6. Customize your portfolio site with Copilot
  7. Deploy your site
🎥 To learn more about Codespaces, watch our video tutorial series

Codespaces Tutorial


🗃️ JavaScript Portfolio template

This repo is a GitHub template to build a JavaScript personal portfolio frontend web application using the React framework. The goal is to give you a template that you can immediately utilize to create your own website through Codespaces.

The repo contains the following:

  • /.devcontainer
    • .devcontainer/Dockerfile: Configuration file used by Codespaces to determine operating system and other details.
    • .devcontainer/devcontainer.json: Configuration file used by Codespaces to configure Visual Studio Code settings, such as the enabling of additional extensions.
  • /src: HTML, JS and CSS files used to build your portfolio site.
  • .eslintrc: Settings for ESLint that is included for code consistency and quality.
  • .prettierrc: Settings for Prettier that is used to format code.
  • package.json and package-lock.json: Defines the project information for Node.js, dependent packages and the versions needed of each.

🚀 Getting started

This portfolio site project is filled with sample data so that you can immediately open Codespaces, see it running, and deploy at any point.

Your development environment is all set for you to start. Based on our JavaScript Codespace Template (React), here is what is already setup and ready for you to use:

  • Simple React application with components for each section of the portfolio site
  • Parcel in place to build your site when deploying
  • Code linting and formatting using ESLint and Prettier for code consistency.

Create your portfolio

  1. Create a repository from this template. Use this create repo link. Select the repository owner, provide a name, a description if you'd like and if you'd like the new repository to be public or private.

  2. Before creating the Codespace, enable GitHub Copilot for your account. If it is not enabled, take a look at Customize your portfolio site using Copilot.

  3. Navigate to the main page of the newly created repository.

  4. Under the repository name, use the Code drop-down menu, and in the Codespaces tab, select "Create codespace on main".

    Create codespace
  5. Wait as GitHub initializes the Codespace.

    Codespace initializing
  6. When complete you will see your Codespace load with a terminal section at the bottom. Codespaces will install all the required extensions in your container, followed by executing npm install. Once the package installs are completed, Codespaces will execute npm start to start your web application running within your Codespace.

    When the web application has successfully started you will see a message in the terminal that the server is running on port 1234 within your Codespace:

    Web application started on port 1234

✨ Customize your site in 3 steps

This project is built to be easily customizable. Each section of the site is a separate component, and your information needs to be set in only one spot. This is not only for ease of updating, but so you can see how prop values are passed to React components.

For each step, open the project in Codespaces, then you can make and commit your changes while within your Codespace.

See Using source control in your codespace for more Codespaces source control how-tos

1️⃣ Add your "About me" and social accounts

Within /src/App.jsx you will see a variable called siteProps. This is a JavaScript object that hold the key value pairs needed to customize your name, title, email, and social accounts.

const siteProps = {
  name: "Alexandrie Grenier",
  title: "Web Designer & Content Creator",
  email: "alex@example.com",
  gitHub: "microsoft",
  instagram: "microsoft",
  linkedIn: "satyanadella",
  medium: "",
  twitter: "microsoft",
  youTube: "microsoft",
};

Update to the name and title you'd like displayed at the top of your site.

Optional values are email address and social accounts. These are used in the Footer component. If any item is not included in the list or set to an empty string ("") it will not display the icon and link.

2️⃣ Update images

This portfolio site includes 3 images: top section background, "About me" background and portfolio section (desk). These can be any landscape sized images of your choosing from your own collection, or found that have a license allowing you to use without attribution.

A couple possible sites to find photos are Pixabay and Unsplash. Photos, illustrations, vectors, your choice! When you find your images, save each one to /src/images with a short, meaningful file name.

Go to the following below components to update the import image... line to reference the new image you downloaded for that section, as well as the imageAltText for the image:

  • /src/Components/Home.jsx - section at top of the page, main image you will see when site loads (woman standing by server wall in sample)
       import image from "../images/server-wall.jpg";
       const imageAltText = "woman holding laptop standing by server room with glass wall";
  • /src/Components/About.jsx - background behind the detailed "About me" section (abstract mosaic in sample)
       import image from "../images/mosaic.svg";
       const imageAltText = "purple and blue abstract background";
  • /src/Components/Portfolio.jsx- image highlighted in left hand side of section (design desk photo in sample)
       import image from "../images/design-desk.jpeg";
       const imageAltText = "desktop with books and laptop";

3️⃣ Add items you've worked on and detail text

The About section helps to give people a bit more information about your skills and passions. Within /src/Components/About.jsx you will find 2 values to update:

  • description: short sentence or two describing yourself, career goals, and/or passions
  • detailOrQuote: longer block for you to add more detail about yourself, or even a quote you like

The second section to update is the Portfolio section, where you highlight items you've worked on. These would be articles, videos, logo designs, GitHub projects, anything that highlights you!

Go to /src/Components/Portfolio.jsx to the projectList variable. This is a JavaScript array of objects. Each item you want to highlight needs: title, description, and URL.

The sample design has 4, but the number you include is up to you.

const projectList = [
  {
    title: "10 Things to know about Azure Static Web Apps 🎉",
    description: "Collaboration to create a beginner friendly....",
    url: "https://dev.to/azure/10-things-to-know-about-azure-static-web-apps-3n4i",
  },
  {
    title: "Web Development for Beginners",
    description: "Contributed sketch note imagery to accompany...",
    url: "https://github.com/microsoft/web-dev-for-beginners",
  },
  {
    title: "My Resume Site",
    description: "Created from Microsoft's resume workshop...",
    url: "https://github.com/microsoft/workshop-library/tree/main/full/build-resume-website",
  },
  {
    title: "GitHub Codespaces and GitHub.dev",
    description: "Video interview to explain when to use GitHub.dev...",
    url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3hHhRME_XI",
  },
];

🏃 Deploy your web application

Project includes the setup needed for you to deploy FREE to either Azure Static Web Apps or GitHub Pages. Instructions are included below for both:

Azure Static Web Apps

Azure Static Web Apps is Microsoft's hosting solution for static sites (or sites that are rendered in the user's browser, not on a server) through Azure. This service provides additional opportunities to expand your site through Azure Functions, authentication, staging versions and more.

You'll need both Azure and GitHub accounts to deploy your web application. If you don't yet have an Azure account you can create it from within during the deploy process, or from below links:

With your project open in Codespaces:

  1. Click Azure icon in the left sidebar. Log in if you are not already, and if new to Azure, follow the prompts to create your account.
  2. From Azure menu click “+” sign and then “Create Static Web App”.
  3. If you are not logged into GitHub you will be prompted to log in. If you have any pending file changes you will then be prompted to commit those changes.
  4. Set your application information when prompted:
    1. Region: pick the one closest to you
    2. Project structure: select "React"
    3. Location of application code: /
    4. Build location: dist
  5. When complete you will see a notification at the bottom of your screen, and a new GitHub Action workflow will be added to your project. If you click “Open Action in GitHub” you will see the action that was created for you, and it is currently running. Azure Static Web App deploy
  6. To view the status of your deployment, find your Static Web App resource in the Azure tab in the VS Code left side bar.
  7. Once deployment is complete, you can view your brand new new publicly accessible application by right clicking on your Static Web App resource and selecting "Browse Site".

Issues? When creating your Static Web app, if you are prompted to select an Azure subscription and are not able to select a subscription, check the "Accounts" tab in VS Code. Make sure to choose the "Grant access to ..." options if those options appear. Should you receive the error-message "RepositoryToken is invalid. ..." switch to Visual Studio Code for the Web (vscode.dev) and repeat the steps there.

🤩 Bonus: Setup a custom domain for your Azure Static Web App

GitHub Pages

GitHub Pages allows you to host websites directly from your GitHub repository. This project is already set up for you to get your portfolio deployed to GitHub pages with minimal steps.

With your project open in Codespaces:

  1. Open package.json and update the following values:
    1. homepage: set to http://{github-username}.github.io/{repo-name}, where github-username is your GitHub username and repo-name is the what you named this portfolio repo when you created it
    2. build-gh: replace github-username with your GitHub username and repo-name with the repository name
  2. Commit and push those changes to package.json to your GitHub remote repo.
  3. Open a new terminal from the menu or by pressing ctrl + shift + ` (or open top left menu, select "Terminal" and "New Terminal")
  4. Within the terminal window run npm run deploy. This will first run the pre-deploy script to build the project, followed by the deploy script that will push those bundled files to a new branch on your repo (gh-pages) that will be used for you GitHub Pages site.
  5. When completed, within your repo, go to Settings and Pages. There you will see that a page has been set up to for you against the gh-pages branch, and you should see the URL (that should match the “homepage” value you set in package.json)

Azure Static Web App deploy

🤩 Bonus: Setup a custom domain for your GitHub pages site


🏆 Customizing with Copilot

Below are 4 additional ways you can continue to customize your Codespace and portfolio site. We'll show you how to use Copilot to make suggestions for faster development, and help you learn more HTML, CSS and JavaScript along the way.

  1. Customize your Codespace
  2. Update to smooth scroll to a section
  3. Animate the desk photo
  4. Add a new section

👋 Getting Copilot access

If you don't yet have Copilot access, you can request it here. If you are a student, you can get Copilot for FREE following these instructions.

To ensure that Copilot is running correctly, navigate to the extension tab in your Codespace and check the status of the Copilot extension. If the status is inactive, recreate the Codespace, and enable the extension to ensure that it is activated.

1. Customize your Codespace

Your environment comes with preinstalled extensions. You can change which extensions your Codespaces environment starts with, here's how:

  1. Open file .devcontainer/devcontainer.json and locate the following JSON element extensions

    "extensions": [
         "dbaeumer.vscode-eslint",
         "esbenp.prettier-vscode",
         "gitHub.copilot",
         "ms-vscode.azure-account",
         "ms-azuretools.vscode-azurestaticwebapps"
    ]
  2. Let's add the indent-rainbow extension. To do this, go to the extensions list and add:

    "oderwat.indent-rainbow"

    What you did above was to add the unique identifier of an extension of the indent-rainbow. This will let Codespaces know that this extension should be pre-installed upon startup.

To find the unique identifier of an extension:


⭐ COPILOT BONUS ⭐

In devcontainer.json, go to the following line in the settings values: "emmet.triggerExpansionOnTab": true. Add a comma at the end of the line and press enter. See what other settings Copilot recommeneds and if they'd help you in your Codespace.

💡 Learn more on how to Personalize Your GitHub Codespace


2. Update to smooth scroll to a section

In your site header you have links to each section below. Click one of these links and watch it scroll the page to that section. Not really a scroll, right?

Let's make this a better user experience by slowing that down so the user has a sense of what is happening, and where they are navigating to on the page.

  1. Open styles.css, which is the stylesheet for your portfolio application. We need to add a style for html. If you look, you'll see right now html and body styles are being set together, with no style set for scroll-behavior. Let's give Copilot a prompt to add this for us.

  2. Below the html and body styling prompt Copilot with a comment of: /* add a smooth scroll */

  3. Copilot will then suggest the CSS below:

    html {
      scroll-behavior: smooth;
    }
  4. Press the tab key to accept the suggestion. (Note: If you don't see this exact suggestion from Copilot, continue typing it to get the suggestion to appear.)

Your site should already be running in your Codespace, and the change will reload onto the page automatically. Click a link in the top header to see the smooth scroll in action.


3. Animate desk photo

Animations are a way you can easily add some motion to elements on your page to increase user interactivity and highlight items you want to make sure they notice. Let's animate the desk photo in the portfolio section.

  1. Open your site's stylesheet, styles.css within your Codespace. Using Copilot, at the bottom of your styles.css prompt Copilot with the following comment:

    /* add a slide In Left animation */

    It should then suggest the following animation sequence for you. Press the tab key to accept, or continue to type until Copilot completes suggestions, and you have your animation ready to use.

    @keyframes slideInLeft {
      0% {
        transform: translateX(-100%);
      }
      100% {
        transform: translateX(0);
      }
    }
  2. With the animation sequenece defined, we can now tell our desk photo to animate itself with our new slideInLeft animation sequence. Open Portfolio.jsx and locate the img tag. You will see it utilizes inline CSS to set it's styling. Within it's style definition add the following:

    animation: "1s ease-out 0s 1 slideInLeft";

    Your image tag should look something like:

    <img src={image} style={{ height: "90%", width: "100%", objectFit: "cover", animation: "1s ease-out 0s 1 slideInLeft" }} />

Your site should already be running in your Codespace, and the change will reload onto the page automatically. Scroll up and down the page and watch your desk photo slide onto the page.


⭐ COPILOT BONUS ⭐

Use Copilot to help you animate the scroll down arrow in your Home component to bounce up and down on your page.

Hint: In your styles.css file, use comments to start to tell Copilot what you want to do. See what is suggests, adjust your prompts, and see how it guides you to get your arrow to bounce.



4. Add a new section

We started you off with a few basic sections for your portfolio site, but you have creative freedom to make it your own and add new sections relevant to what you want on your site.

For an example, let's add an education section to your portfolio site.

  1. Create a new component for the section within the Components folder. Add a new file called Education.jsx.

  2. Let's have Copilot help get us started. Instead of prompting with a comment, start your Education.jsx file with:

    import React from "react";

    As you start typing it will pick up what you are doing and may offer an autocomplete of that line.

  3. Press enter after the import line to have Copilot suggest code to create your Education component. Press tab to accept the solution or crtl + enter to view all Copilot suggestions and select the one that works for you.

    At minimum, you need a const defined and the Education component exported (example below). The rest is up to you. Experiment with Copilot, nudging it along with what you'd like it to build out.

    import React from "react";
    
    const Education = () => {
        return(
            <section className="light" id="education">
                <h2>Education</h2>
            </section>
        )
    }
    
    export default Education;
  4. In App.jsx import your new Education component at the top by adding the following, and watch as Copilot starts to see what you are doing and give you auto-complete suggestions:

    import Education from "./Components/Education";
  5. Now add the Education component by going to a new line where you want it rendered. Watch Copilot already know you want to render the Education component. It should suggest the following that you can accept, and will render your new component:

    <Education />

In your Codespace, your portfolio application should be running and will reload your site with the changes.


⭐ COPILOT BONUS ⭐

Now that you are familiar how Copilot can not only help you code faster, but give you suggestions to save you time looking up solutions.

Explore how you can use Copilot to help you:

  • add Education to your top navigation
  • build education details by prompting it (Hint: add the comment of "grid of 4 education cells")


📚 Resources

Codespaces Browser App

If you are using Edge or Chrome you will see an option to install the Codespaces app when you launch your Codespace. The Codespaces app lets you launch your Codespace within the app so you can work outside of the browser. Look for the app icon and install pop-up to try it out.

Web application started on port 1234

🔎 Found an issue or have an idea for improvement?

Help us make this template repository better by letting us know and opening an issue!.

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