Stupid question -- how do I submit an assignment?

Tell us what’s happening:
OK, I’m on my first project of the HTML/CSS section. I’ve created a page similar to what’s on the FCC Tribute Page (I’m assuming that’s what y’all wanted, anyway), but I’m confused about how we submit assignments.

On the FCC Tribute Page, not seeing an obvious way to submit my assignment, I clicked the “Run Tests” button, and the bottom button turned green, with the label “Tests 10/10”. I first thought that meant I passed, but then I went back to the FreeCodeCamp homepage to make sure that this registers as a pass, but it says 0/5 on the “projects” section.

So my question is, how do I submit the code I’ve come up with?

Your code so far

<div>
<h1>Dr. Norman Borlaug</h1>
<h4>The man who saved a billion lives.</h4>
</div>
<img src="https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3689/10613180113_fdf7bcd316_b.jpg" class="image">
<p>Dr. Norman Borlaug, third from the left, trains biologists in Mexico on how to increase wheat yields - part of his life-long war on hunger.</p>
<main>
  <h3>Here's a time line of Dr. Borlaug's life:</h3>
  <ul>
    <li><strong>1914</strong> - Born in Cresco, Iowa</li>
    <li><strong>1933</strong> - Leaves his family's farm to attend the University of Minnesota, thanks to a Depression era program known as the "National Youth Administration"</li>
    <li><strong>1935</strong> - Has to stop school and save up more money. Works in the Civilian Conservation Corps, helping starving Americans. "I saw how food changed them", he said. "All of this left scars on me."</li>
    <li><strong>1937</strong> - Finishes university and takes a job in the US Forestry Service</li>
    <li><strong>1938</strong> - Marries wife of 69 years Margret Gibson. Gets laid off due to budget cuts. Inspired by Elvin Charles Stakman, he returns to school study under Stakman, who teaches him about breeding pest-resistent plants.</li>
    <li><strong>1941</strong> - Tries to enroll in the military after the Pearl Harbor attack, but is rejected. Instead, the military asked his lab to work on waterproof glue, DDT to control malaria, disinfectants, and other applied science.</li>
    <li><strong>1942</strong> - Receives a Ph.D. in Genetics and Plant Pathology</li>
    <li><strong>1944</strong> - Rejects a 100% salary increase from Dupont, leaves behind his pregnant wife, and flies to Mexico to head a new plant pathology program. Over the next 16 years, his team breeds 6,000 different strains of disease resistent wheat - including different varieties for each major climate on Earth.</li>
    <li><strong>1945</strong> - Discovers a way to grown wheat twice each season, doubling wheat yields</li>
    <li><strong>1953</strong> - crosses a short, sturdy dwarf breed of wheat with a high-yeidling American breed, creating a strain that responds well to fertilizer. It goes on to provide 95% of Mexico's wheat.</li>
    <li><strong>1962</strong> - Visits Delhi and brings his high-yielding strains of wheat to the Indian subcontinent in time to help mitigate mass starvation due to a rapidly expanding population</li>
    <li><strong>1970</strong> - receives the Nobel Peace Prize</li>
    <li><strong>1983</strong> - helps seven African countries dramatically increase their maize and sorghum yields</li>
    <li><strong>1984</strong> - becomes a distinguished professor at Texas A&M University</li>
    <li><strong>2005</strong> - states "we will have to double the world food supply by 2050." Argues that genetically modified crops are the only way we can meet the demand, as we run out of arable land. Says that GM crops are not inherently dangerous because "we've been genetically modifying plants and animals for a long time. Long before we called it science, people were selecting the best breeds."</li>
    <li><strong>2009</strong> - dies at the age of 95.</li>
  </ul>
</main>

<div>  
<p class="end-paragraph"><em>"Borlaug's life and achievement are testimony to the far-reaching contribution that one man's towering intellect, persistence and scientific vision can make to human peace and progress."</em></p>
  
  <p class="end-paragraph"><em>-- Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh</em></p>
</div>

<h3>If you have time, you should read more about this incredible human being on his <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Borlaug" target="_blank">Wikipedia entry</a>.</h3>

```css

h1, h3, h4, p {text-align: center;}

.image {
  display: block;
  margin: auto;
}

div, main {
  background-color: #eeeeee;
  display: block;
  margin: auto;
  width: 33%;
}

li {padding-bottom: 20px;}

.end-paragraph {text-align: left;}

**Your browser information:**

User Agent is: <code>Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Ubuntu Chromium/83.0.4103.61 Chrome/83.0.4103.61 Safari/537.36</code>.

**Challenge:** Size Your Images

**Link to the challenge:**
https://www.freecodecamp.org/learn/responsive-web-design/basic-css/size-your-images

Hello~!

You should have the project hosted somewhere live (like CodePen). Copy the URL to that live version, and submit it on the project challenge page on freeCodeCamp. :slightly_smiling_face:

Well, you have to go to a website like CodePen and build your project there or copy and paste what you have already made locally.
And share the link of the pen on freeCodeCamp.

Thanx! Figured it out, submitted, and it said I passed! :slight_smile: