diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'blog/website-redesign/index.org')
-rw-r--r-- | blog/website-redesign/index.org | 96 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 96 deletions
diff --git a/blog/website-redesign/index.org b/blog/website-redesign/index.org deleted file mode 100644 index cfa8795..0000000 --- a/blog/website-redesign/index.org +++ /dev/null @@ -1,96 +0,0 @@ -#+title: Redesigning My Website: The 5 KB Result -#+date: 2020-12-27 -#+description: A retrospective on my recent website redesign. -#+filetags: :sysadmin: - -* A Brief History -As a form of continuous learning and entertainment, I've been running a -handful of websites since 2016 when I took my first programming courses -in college. I maintain one main website, the place I consider the -official website to represent me. Under this site, I have a handful of -subdirectories and subdomains. - -One of the parts I've enjoyed the most about web development is the -aspect of designing an identity for a web page and working to find -exciting ways to display the site's content. Inevitably, this means I've -changed the designs for my websites more times than I could possibly -count. Since I don't really host anything on my main webpage that's -vital, it allows me the freedom to change things as inspiration strikes. - -Historically, I've relied on core utilities for spacing, components, and -layouts from [[https://getbootstrap.com][Bootstrap]] and added custom -CSS for fonts, accents, colors, and other items. I also tend to create -sites with no border radius on items, visible borders, and content that -takes up the entire screen (using whitespace inside components instead -of whitespace around my components). - -* The Redesign Process -About a week ago, I found myself wishing for a new design yet again. The -prior design was largely inspired by IBM's -[[https://www.carbondesignsystem.com][Carbon Design System]] and relied -on jQuery, Bootstrap, along with some compressed -[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebP][.webp]] images. - -To anyone who knows my preferences toward web design - and even in my -personal life - it should be no surprise that I immediately started -looking for inspiration on minimalism. While there are some decent -minimalistic designs on sites like -[[https://dribbble.com/search/shots/popular/web-design?q=minimalism][Dribbble]], -people seem to mostly discuss [[https://brutalist-web.design][brutalist -web design]] when you ask about minimalism. While brutalist web design -doesn't have to be minimal, it often is. - -I suppose, in a way, I did create a brutalist website since my HTML is -semantic and accessible, hyperlinks are colored and underlined, and all -native browser functions like scrolling and the back button work as -expected. However, I didn't think about brutalism while designing these -sites. - -The new design followed a simple design process. I walked through the -screens on my blog and asked myself: "Is this element necessary for a -user?" This allowed me to first start by removing all javascript, which -had the sole purpose of allowing users to open a collapsed navbar on -mobile. Replacing the collapsible navbar allowed me to remove both -jQuery and Bootstrap's javascript. - -Next, I removed things like author names (since I'm literally the only -person who will ever write on this site), multiple ways to click on a -blog post card, blog post descriptions, and the scroll-to-top button. It -also helped to move all categories to a single page, rather than have -each category on its own page. - -The final big piece to finish the -"[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Kondo#KonMari_method][KonMari]]"-like -part of my process was to remove Bootstrap CSS in its entirety. However, -this meant pulling out a few very useful classes, such as =.img-fluid= -and the default font stacks to keep in my custom CSS. - -After removing all the unnecessary pieces, I was finally able to -reorganize my content and add a very small amount of custom CSS to make -everything pretty. This took a brief amount of time, effectively just -consisting of me converting =<div>= tags into things like =<ul>= lists -and choosing accent colors. - -* The Results -** Reflection -So, what did all of this reorganizing do to my webpages? Well, first, my -websites are now *ridiculously fast*. Since the prior designs were also -minimal and didn't have many images, they measured up in Firefox's -Network Monitor around 300 KB - 600KB. After making the changes, my main -site is at 5 KB transferred (22 KB total), and my blog is at 6.5 KB -transferred (13 KB total). *That means the redesigned pages are less -than 2% the size of the old designs.* - -Google Lighthouse ranks the new webpage as 100 in performance, -accessibility, and best practices, with SEO at 92 since they think tap -targets are not sized appropriately for mobile users. First contextual -paints of the pages are under 0.8 seconds with 0 ms of blocking time. -However, the blog subdomain ranks at 100 for all four categories! First -contextual paints of the blog homepage are under 1.0 seconds with 0 ms -of blocking time, due to the fact that the CSS for my blog is within a -separate CSS file, and the CSS for my main website is simply embedded in -the HTML file. - -Now that everything is complete, I can confidently say I'm happy with -the result and proud to look at the fastest set of websites I've created -so far. |