![css3 menu nav css3 menu nav](https://i.stack.imgur.com/h0EiY.png)
See the Pen Fully responsive navigation with CSS animations and jQuery by Jan Czizikow 4. It’s clean, and features some great animation features alongside the responsive techniques. I would mostly recommend this type of navigation for a sales page or a simple portfolio site. Not to mention, they automatically resize to the perfect fit regardless of your browser size. The links scroll down with a smooth animation but don’t leave you waiting for too long. This is a perfect example of single-page navigation in action. Single page navigation menus need love just like the any other. See the Pen Responsive Dropdown Navigation Bar by Tania Rascia 3. Still, for such a clean design, I’m surprised at how much versatility this snippet offers developers. You could change that to CSS-only, but you’ll lose the click trigger. The sub-menu links only appear on a click event which is handled by jQuery. In this case, you’ll find a simple list of links with a very small dropdown. It’s a strong alternative to the more basic navigations that only feature a handful of menu items.
![css3 menu nav css3 menu nav](https://freefrontend.com/assets/img/css-menu/thumb.png)
If you need longer dropdown items in your navigation then this menu might work better. See the Pen Responsive Navigation Demo w/ Kube by Johnny Mango 2. This effect can be altered on a “live” website with the same navigation, but it’s useful in this example to show off the page’s UI/UX. You’ll notice the navigation has an interesting feature when you hover and auto-focus on links. This responsive example – created by Johnny Mango – shows how far you can take a website’s prototyping phase.