I open-sourced my Nuxt 3 portfolio. Here's what's inside
I spent years telling clients their portfolio needed to be "premium." Mine didn't even exist. C'est le cordonnier le plus mal chaussé, as we say in France. Time to fix that. Here's how I built emer...

Source: DEV Community
I spent years telling clients their portfolio needed to be "premium." Mine didn't even exist. C'est le cordonnier le plus mal chaussé, as we say in France. Time to fix that. Here's how I built emericguyon.com — and why I'm giving you the entire source code. The stack No overthinking. Tools I already know and trust: Nuxt 3 — SSR, auto-imports, file-based routing. The Vue ecosystem at its best. Vue 3 — Composition API, <script setup>, TypeScript everywhere. Tailwind CSS 4 — utility-first, fast iteration, no CSS file archaeology. GSAP — because CSS animations hit a wall real fast when you want scroll-triggered timelines and canvas work. That's it. No CMS, no headless backend, no GraphQL layer. It's a portfolio, not a SaaS. The canvas hero — a.k.a. "the thing everyone asks about" The homepage background is a <canvas> that renders actual code scrolling in real-time. Not a video. Not a GIF. Actual characters drawn frame by frame with fillText. Here's the gist: // Each frame, we o