Back to logs

Scroll test

Long scroll test

This article is intentionally longer than the others. The goal is to test the reading view, not to publish a finished essay. When an article has enough paragraphs, the reader area should keep the page frame stable and scroll the text inside the canvas.

I want this site to feel calm even when it has more content. That means the header, footer, and outer shell should stay composed while the article body gets its own comfortable reading space.

The reader should be useful for short logs, but it should also survive a longer post about a course, a SwiftUI concept, a health experiment, or a messy week of learning.

A good article view should not make the whole layout jump around. It should give the text enough width, enough line height, and enough contrast so reading feels easy in both dark mode and light mode.

This paragraph is here to add more height. In the future, a real post might explain what I learned while building my first iOS app, what I misunderstood, what I fixed, and what I want to try next.

This one keeps going for the same reason. The content area should scroll independently once the text becomes taller than the available space. That makes the site feel more like a focused little app than a loose pile of pages.

I can also imagine using these logs for course notes. One post could be a summary of a module, another could be about a SwiftUI view I rebuilt, and another could be about the habits that helped me stay consistent.

The important part is that the website should invite writing. If adding a paragraph feels simple, then I am more likely to document the journey instead of waiting for everything to be polished.

Dark mode should keep the text bright without being harsh. Light mode should stay clean without becoming flat. Both modes should make the scrollable article feel like it belongs in the same design system.

This is the final test paragraph. If you can scroll this article inside the reader panel, the structure is working and ready for real posts.