About Me

Orlando Yahir Flores Bedolla

Frontend & Game Developer

  • Frontend Development HTML5 · CSS3 · JavaScript
  • Game Development Godot · Unity · GameMaker
UI Responsive Animations Gameplay Systems

Demo Interactive UI

made by Orlando

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Alert

Press the button to show an alert.

Confirmation Dialog

Press the button to show a confirmation dialog.

Confirmation Window

Press the button to show a confirmation window.

Imagine this is the feed of your website

Add an image + text. Items will appear when you scroll down.

Frequently Asked Questions

An accordion to store some important information for your website.

I'm the following:

  • An accordion
  • A part of the frontend of this website
  • The "I would like someone asked" questions section

There isn’t a strict universal limit on how long the information inside this section can be, because it depends on a combination of design, readability, performance, and the purpose of the page. In most modern websites, a “section” is simply a container element and, technically speaking, you can place a very large amount of text inside it without the browser rejecting it. However, just because you can add a lot of content doesn’t mean it’s always the best choice.

From a user experience perspective, the length should ideally match what the visitor expects to find there. If the section is meant to be a short introduction, summary, or call-to-action, then the content should stay relatively concise so people can understand it quickly without feeling overwhelmed. On the other hand, if the section is meant to serve as a detailed explanation, tutorial, documentation-style block, or an “About” section with extended context, then having multiple paragraphs (or even a long scrollable area) can be totally acceptable.

That being said, extremely long blocks of text inside a single section can become difficult to scan, especially on mobile devices. Visitors usually don’t read everything word-for-word; they skim. Because of this, it’s often better to break long content into smaller parts such as headings, subsections, bullet lists, collapsible sections (“Read more”), or separate pages. This improves clarity, makes the layout less intimidating, and helps users quickly find what they’re looking for.

There are also technical considerations. Even though browsers can handle large amounts of content, placing an excessive wall of text or a heavy amount of elements inside one area can slightly affect loading time, rendering speed, and responsiveness—especially if the section includes large images, animations, interactive components, or complex styling effects. In extreme cases, a massive section can feel sluggish or awkward to navigate, which reduces overall quality.

So the most accurate answer is: the information inside this section can be as long as needed, but it should be limited by what is useful, readable, and effective for the user. If the content is long, it’s recommended to structure it properly with spacing, headings, and logical chunks so it stays clear and visually comfortable. Ultimately, the best length is the one that communicates the message completely without wasting the user’s attention or damaging the layout and experience.

Tip: Don't read it all. It's too much fluff.

yes

Interactive items

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120
0

Click the ball to launch it. If you change the angle, speed, or color, it resets to the center.

Currently stopped

Projects I've worked on:

Is there anything you'd like to see in your website? We can definitely do it!

Primera Página
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