design/styleguide/demopage/index.html

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<title>Demopage</title>
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<a href="/" id="backToWiki">
<img src="../assets/image/logo_eventname_glow.svg" class="header-image dark-only" alt="Logo of Easterhegg 2025. In the style of a neon sign:
The text 'Unhandled Eggception Easterhegg 2025' with a line art of a hare and an egg.
The egg shell and the word 'Eggception' are glowing in a light blue, everything else in a bright pink." />
<img src="../assets/image/logo_eventname_glow_off.svg" class="header-image light-only" alt="Logo of Easterhegg 2025. In the style of a unpowered neon sign:
The text 'Unhandled Eggception Easterhegg 2025' with a line art of a hare and an egg.
The egg shell and the word 'Eggception' are dimly glowing in a dark blue, everything else in a dark pink." />
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<ul>
<li class="link-back"><a href="/"><i data-icon="arrow-left"></i>Back to Wiki</a></li>
<li><a href="../"><i data-icon="home"></i>Overview</a></li>
<li><a href="../colors"><i data-icon="info"></i>Colors</a></li>
<li><a href="../typography"><i data-icon="info"></i>Typography</a></li>
<li><a href="../iconography"><i data-icon="info"></i>Iconography</a></li>
<li><a href="../logo"><i data-icon="info"></i>Logo</a></li>
<li class="active"><a href=""><i data-icon="info"></i>Demopage</a></li>
<li><a href="../generator"><i data-icon="info"></i>Image Generator</a></li>
<li class="dark-only toggleTheme" data-theme="light"><a href="#" aria-label="switch to light theme"><i
data-icon="light" class="glow"></i></a></li>
<li class="light-only toggleTheme" data-theme="dark"><a href="#" aria-label="switch to dark theme"><i
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<p>
<strong>Work in progress</strong>
This style guide is still under development.<br>
Not all resources may be available yet, explanations and examples may be missing and things may
change without notice.
</p>
</div>
<h1>Demopage</h1>
<p>This page contains examples for various text-components and fonts, as well as colorpalettes, images, and
so on. Use can use it to get familiar with the design and as a reference for styling your own content.
</p>
<section>
<h2>Overview of Link-Highlighting</h2>
<table>
<tr>
<th scope="row">Regular Link:</th>
<td><a class="a-regular" href="">https://eh22.easterhegg.eu/</a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">Hover/Focus/Active Link:</th>
<td><a class="a-hover" href="">https://eh22.easterhegg.eu/</a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">Visited Link:</th>
<td><a class="a-visited" href="">https://eh22.easterhegg.eu/</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
</section>
<section>
<h2>Ordered and Unordered Lists</h2>
<p>This is just a simple section containing plain text as well as some lists. This way you can get a
feel for how lists fit into their surrounding content. Have a look at this ordered list: We simply
prefix each item with a one-indexed, right aligned number followed by a dot.</p>
<ol>
<li>Short item no. 1.</li>
<li>Long item in the middle. This item is longer then one visual line, which is why it wraps over
into the next line and therefore moves the next item further down.</li>
<li>Long item at the end, which is also longer than one visual line. It also wraps over into the
next line, but there is no next item to move.</li>
</ol>
<p>But sometimes, the order of items doesn't matter, in that case, we instead put a basic bullet point
infront of each item:</p>
<ul>
<li>Short item no. 1.</li>
<li>Long item in the middle. This item is longer then one visual line, which is why it wraps over
into the next line and therefore moves the next item further down.</li>
<li>Long item at the end, which is also longer than one visual line. It also wraps over into the
next line, but there is no next item to move.</li>
</ul>
</section>
<section>
<h2>Preformatted Text</h2>
<!-- TODO: custom highlighting theme -->
<p>This example doesn't use any syntax highlighting, but one can of course use a highlighting theme to
make it easier to differentiate identifiers and similar. At the current state, we don't recommended
a specific highlight-theme, but this might still change.</p>
<pre area-labelledby="code-positives-description"><code>#include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
int *positives(int *numbers, int *size) {
int new_size = 0;
for (int i = 0; i &lt; *size; i++) {
if (numbers[i] &gt;= 0) {
numbers[new_size] = numbers[i];
new_size++;
}
}
*size = new_size;
return realloc(numbers, sizeof(*numbers) * new_size);
}</code></pre>
<p>This is a simple function written in C, which removes all negative integers from an array and updates
its element count.</p>
</section>
<section>
<h2>Section With Image</h2>
<p>When including images in your content, you can opt into applying an SVG filter that adds visual
glitches to the image. This shouldn't be used on images with text or important details, because the
glitches will most likely reduce readability. Let's use the following plain image:</p>
<figure>
<img src="../assets/image/example_cat.jpg" alt="Photograph of a young white-furred cat with blue eyes. It is leaning on its forelegs on some kind
of leopard-print fabric and looking at something behind the camera. The background is dark and
plain." />
<figcaption>Example image without any distortion applied.</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>Now, in HTML you could simply specify <code>class="glitch"</code> on the image tag to add the SVG
filter dynamically, but this won't render said filter in Apple's Safari, which has been a known
issue for many years. So instead, we also made <a href="../generator">a simple web-tool to apply the
filter</a> to an image and export it as a PNG. The tool also scales the image down to ensure
that the filter looks similar across all images.</p>
<figure>
<img class="glitch" src="../assets/image/example_cat.jpg" alt="The same photograph as before, except with a glitchy filer applied. The first effect applies to
bright edges, which get surrounded by pink and blue to their left and right hand side. The second
one distorts the image by offsetting parts of the image horizontally by seemingly random yet
somewhat osscilating amounts." />
<figcaption>Example image with visual glitches applied.</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>Of course, every image should include an image description. No matter if its a website, social media
post, or a PDF. Most if not all wordprocessors (this includes Word, LaTeX and Typst) support this in
one way or another.</p>
<p>We would also prefer it, if no one uses "AI-generated" images. The entire event design was created
through hard work by living beings. No LLM/GenAI was involved in any part of the design processes.
So we kindly ask you not to use tools which are based on theft, actively harm artist and destroy our
planet in the process. ("AI-generated" of course does not apply to generative art and similar, but
to LLMs/GenAI.)</p>
</section>
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