Book Image

Webflow by Example

By : Ali Rushdan Tariq
Book Image

Webflow by Example

By: Ali Rushdan Tariq

Overview of this book

Webflow is a modern no-code website-builder that enables you to rapidly design and build production-scale responsive websites. Webflow by Example is a practical, project-based, and beginner-friendly guide to understanding and using Webflow to efficiently build and launch responsive websites from scratch. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will take you through modern web development principles and help you to apply them efficiently using Webflow. You’ll also get to grips with modern responsive web development and understand how to take advantage of the power and flexibility of Webflow. The book will guide you through a real-life project where you will build a fully responsive and dynamic website from scratch. You will learn how to add animations and interactions, customize experiences for users, and more. Finally, the book covers important steps and best practices for making your website ready for production, including SEO optimization and how to publish and package the website. By the end of this Webflow book, you will have gained the skills you need to build modern responsive websites from scratch without any code.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Webflow
5
Section 2: Building a Mobile Responsive Landing Page with Webflow
11
Section 3: Building a Dynamic Website with Webflow CMS
16
Section 4: Additional Topics

Animating the menu on scroll

In our current version of the SecondPlate landing page, the top menu is only visible and accessible if you're at the very top of the page. Once you scroll, the menu is out of reach.

But what if we wanted the menu to always be visible so that it's in easy reach, regardless of where on the page the visitor is? We could achieve this by fixing the menu to the top of the page so that it sticks there as you scroll. This could be handy, but making the menu always visible may take up too much valuable attention and real estate, especially on smaller screens such as mobile phones.

This is where a simple interaction could come to the rescue.

What we can do is hide the menu when the user scrolls down the page and make it reappear whenever the user begins to scroll back up. This is a type of anticipatory design; we show elements to users only when we anticipate that they might want to see them.

Let's begin by making the menu fixed to the...