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Bootstrap is a toolkit from Twitter designed to kickstart development of webapps and sites.
It includes base CSS and HTML for typography, forms, buttons, tables, grids, navigation, and more.
Nerd alert: Bootstrap is built with Less and was designed to work out of the gate with modern browsers in mind.
For the quickest and easiest start, just copy this snippet into your webpage.
A fan of using Less? No problem, just clone the repo and add these lines:
Download, fork, pull, file issues, and more with the official Bootstrap repo on Github.
Currently v1.3.0
Engineers at Twitter have historically used almost any library they were familiar with to meet front-end requirements. Bootstrap began as an answer to the challenges that presented. With the help of many awesome folks, Bootstrap has grown significantly.
Read more on dev.twitter.com ›
Bootstrap is tested and supported in major modern browsers like Chrome, Safari, Internet Explorer, and Firefox.
Bootstrap comes complete with compiled CSS, uncompiled, and example templates.
The default grid system provided as part of Bootstrap is a 940px wide 16-column grid. It’s a flavor of the popular 960 grid system, but without the additional margin/padding on the left and right sides.
As shown here, a basic layout can be created with two "columns," each spanning a number of the 16 foundational columns we defined as part of our grid system. See the examples below for more variations.
<div class="row"> <div class="span6"> ... </div> <div class="span10"> ... </div> </div>
Nest your content if you must by creating a .row
within an existing column.
<div class="row"> <div class="span12"> Level 1 of column <div class="row"> <div class="span6"> Level 2 </div> <div class="span6"> Level 2 </div> </div> </div> </div>
Built into Bootstrap are a handful of variables for customizing the default 940px grid system. With a bit of customization, you can modify the size of columns, their gutters, and the container they reside in.
The variables needed to modify the grid system currently all reside in variables.less
.
Variable | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
@gridColumns |
16 | The number of columns within the grid |
@gridColumnWidth |
40px | The width of each column within the grid |
@gridGutterWidth |
20px | The negative space between each column |
@siteWidth |
Computed sum of all columns and gutters | We use some basic match to count the number of columns and gutters and set the width of the .fixed-container() mixin. |
Modifying the grid means changing the three @grid-*
variables and recompiling the Less files.
Bootstrap comes equipped to handle a grid system with up to 24 columns; the default is just 16. Here's how your grid variables would look customized to a 24-column grid.
@gridColumns: 24; @gridColumnWidth: 20px; @gridGutterWidth: 20px;
Once recompiled, you'll be set!
The default and simple 940px-wide, centered layout for just about any website or page provided by a single <div.container>
.
<body> <div class="container"> ... </div> </body>
An alternative, flexible fluid page structure with min- and max-widths and a left-hand sidebar. Great for apps and docs.
<body> <div class="container-fluid"> <div class="sidebar"> ... </div> <div class="content"> ... </div> </div> </body>
A standard typographic hierarchy for structuring your webpages.
The entire typographic grid is based on two Less variables in our variables.less file: @basefont
and @baseline
. The first is the base font-size used throughout and the second is the base line-height.
We use those variables, and some math, to create the margins, paddings, and line-heights of all our type and more.
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Using emphasis, addresses, & abbreviations
<strong>
<em>
<address>
<abbr>
Emphasis tags (<strong>
and <em>
) should be used to indicate additional importance or emphasis of a word or phrase relative to its surrounding copy. Use <strong>
for importance and <em>
for stress emphasis.
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Note: It's still okay to use <b>
and <i>
tags in HTML5 and they don't have to be styled bold and italic, respectively (although if there is a more semantic element, use it). <b>
is meant to highlight words or phrases without conveying additional importance, while <i>
is mostly for voice, technical terms, etc.
The <address>
element is used for contact information for its nearest ancestor, or the entire body of work. Here are two examples of how it could be used:
Note: Each line in an <address>
must end with a line-break (<br />
) or be wrapped in a block-level tag (e.g., <p>
) to properly structure the content.
For abbreviations and acronyms, use the <abbr>
tag (<acronym>
is deprecated in HTML5). Put the shorthand form within the tag and set a title for the complete name.
<blockquote>
<p>
<small>
To include a blockquote, wrap <blockquote>
around <p>
and <small>
tags. Use the <small>
element to cite your source and you'll get an em dash —
before it.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer posuere erat a ante venenatis dapibus posuere velit aliquet.
Dr. Julius Hibbert
<blockquote> <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer posuere erat a ante venenatis dapibus posuere velit aliquet.</p> <small>Dr. Julius Hibbert</small> </blockquote>
<ul>
<ul.unstyled>
<ol>
dl
<code>
<pre>
Pimp your code in style with two simple tags. For even more awesomeness through javascript, drop in Google's code prettify library and you're set.
Code, blocks of or just snippets inline, can be displayed with style just by wrapping in the right tag. For blocks of code spanning multiple lines, use the <pre>
element. For inline code, use the <code>
element.
Element | Result |
---|---|
<code> |
In a line of text like this, your wrapped code will look like this <html> element. |
<pre> |
<div> <h1>Heading</h1> <p>Something right here...</p> </div> Note: Be sure to keep code within |
<pre class="prettyprint"> |
Using the google-code-prettify library, your blocks of code get a slightly different visual style and automatic syntax highlighting. <div> <h1>Heading</h1> <p>Something right here...</p> </div> Download google-code-prettify and view the readme for how to use. |
<span class="label">
Call attention to or flag any phrase in your body text.
Ever needed one of those fancy New! or Important flags when writing code? Well, now you have them. Here's what's included by default:
Label | Result |
---|---|
<span class="label">Default</span>
|
Default |
<span class="label success">New</span>
|
New |
<span class="label warning">Warning</span>
|
Warning |
<span class="label important">Important</span>
|
Important |
<span class="label notice">Notice</span>
|
Notice |
Display thumbnails of varying sizes on pages with a low HTML footprint and minimal styles.
Thumbnails in the .media-grid
can be any size, but they work best when mapped directly to the built-in Bootstrap grid system. Image widths like 90, 210, and 330 combine with a few pixels of padding to equal the .span2
, .span4
, and .span6
column sizes.
Media grids are easy to use and rather simple on the markup side. Their dimensions are purely based on the size of the images included.
<ul class="media-grid"> <li> <a href="#"> <img class="thumbnail" src="https://placehold.it/330x230" alt=""> </a> </li> <li> <a href="#"> <img class="thumbnail" src="https://placehold.it/330x230" alt=""> </a> </li> </ul>
<table>
<thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<th>
<td>
<colspan>
<caption>
Tables are great—for a lot of things. Great tables, however, need a bit of markup love to be useful, scalable, and readable (at the code level). Here are a few tips to help.
Always wrap your column headers in a <thead>
such that hierarchy is <thead>
> <tr>
> <th>
.
Similar to the column headers, all your table’s body content should be wrapped in a <tbody>
so your hierarchy is <tbody>
> <tr>
> <td>
.
All tables will be automatically styled with only the essential borders to ensure readability and maintain structure. No need to add extra classes or attributes.
# | First Name | Last Name | Language |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Some | One | English |
2 | Joe | Sixpack | English |
3 | Stu | Dent | Code |
<table> ... </table>
For tables that require more data in tighter spaces, use the condensed flavor that cuts padding in half. It can also be used in conjunction with borders and zebra-stripes, just like the default table styles.
# | First Name | Last Name | Language |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Some | One | English |
2 | Joe | Sixpack | English |
3 | Stu | Dent | Code |
Make your tables look just a wee bit sleeker by rounding their corners and adding borders on all sides.
# | First Name | Last Name | Language |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Some | One | English |
2 | Joe | Sixpack | English |
3 | Stu | Dent | Code |
<table class="bordered-table"> ... </table>
Get a little fancy with your tables by adding zebra-striping—just add the .zebra-striped
class.
# | First Name | Last Name | Language |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Some | One | English |
2 | Joe | Sixpack | English |
3 | Stu | Dent | Code |
span 4 columns | |||
span 2 columns | span 2 columns |
Note: Zebra-striping is a progressive enhancement not available for older browsers like IE8 and below.
<table class="zebra-striped"> ... </table>
Taking the previous example, we improve the usefulness of our tables by providing sorting functionality via jQuery and the Tablesorter plugin. Click any column’s header to change the sort.
# | First Name | Last Name | Language |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Your | One | English |
2 | Joe | Sixpack | English |
3 | Stu | Dent | Code |
<script src="js/jquery/jquery.tablesorter.min.js"></script> <script > $(function() { $("table#sortTableExample").tablesorter({ sortList: [[1,0]] }); }); </script> <table class="zebra-striped"> ... </table>
All forms are given default styles to present them in a readable and scalable way. Styles are provided for text inputs, select lists, textareas, radio buttons and checkboxes, and buttons.
Add .form-stacked
to your form’s HTML and you’ll have labels on top of their fields instead of to their left. This works great if your forms are short or you have two columns of inputs for heavier forms.
Customize any form input
, select
, or textarea
width by adding just a few classes to your markup.
As of v1.3.0, we have added the grid-based sizing classes for form elements. Please use the these over the existing .mini
, .small
, etc classes.
As a convention, buttons are used for actions while links are used for objects. For instance, "Download" could be a button and "recent activity" could be a link.
All buttons default to a light gray style, but a number of functional classes can be applied for different color styles. These classes include a blue .primary
class, a light-blue .info
class, a green .success
class, and a red .danger
class.
Button styles can be applied to anything with the .btn
applied. Typically you’ll want to apply these to only <a>
, <button>
, and select <input>
elements. Here’s how it looks:
Fancy larger or smaller buttons? Have at it!
For buttons that are not active or are disabled by the app for one reason or another, use the disabled state. That’s .disabled
for links and :disabled
for <button>
elements.
.alert-message
One-line messages for highlighting the failure, possible failure, or success of an action. Particularly useful for forms.
<div class="alert-message warning"> <a class="close" href="#">×</a> <p><strong>Holy guacamole!</strong> Best check yo self, you’re not looking too good.</p> </div>
.alert-message.block-message
For messages that require a bit of explanation, we have paragraph style alerts. These are perfect for bubbling up longer error messages, warning a user of a pending action, or just presenting information for more emphasis on the page.
<div class="alert-message block-message warning"> <a class="close" href="#">×</a> <p><strong>Holy guacamole! This is a warning!</strong> Best check yo self, you’re not looking too good. Nulla vitae elit libero, a pharetra augue. Praesent commodo cursus magna, vel scelerisque nisl consectetur et.</p> <div class="alert-actions"> <a class="btn small" href="#">Take this action</a> <a class="btn small" href="#">Or do this</a> </div> </div>
Modals—dialogs or lightboxes—are great for contextual actions in situations where it’s important that the background context be maintained.
One fine body…
Twipsies are super useful for aiding a confused user and pointing them in the right direction.
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Use popovers to provide subtextual information to a page without affecting layout.
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Integrating javascript with the Bootstrap library is super easy. Below we go over the basics and provide you with some awesome plugins to get you started!
Bring some of Bootstrap's primary components to life with new custom plugins that work with jQuery and Ender. We encourage you to extend and modify them to fit your specific development needs.
File | Description |
---|---|
bootstrap-modal.js | Our Modal plugin is a super slim take on the traditional modal js plugin! We took special care to include only the bare functionality that we require at twitter. |
bootstrap-alerts.js | The alert plugin is a super tiny class for adding close functionality to alerts. |
bootstrap-dropdown.js | This plugin is for adding dropdown interaction to the bootstrap topbar or tabbed navigations. |
bootstrap-scrollspy.js | The ScrollSpy plugin is for adding an auto updating nav based on scroll position to the bootstrap topbar. |
bootstrap-buttons.js | The ScrollSpy plugin is for adding an auto updating nav based on scroll position to the bootstrap topbar. |
bootstrap-tabs.js | This plugin adds quick, dynamic tab and pill functionality for cycling through local content. |
bootstrap-twipsy.js | Based on the excellent jQuery.tipsy plugin written by Jason Frame; twipsy is an updated version, which doesn't rely on images, uses css3 for animations, and data-attributes for local title storage! |
bootstrap-popover.js | The popover plugin provides a simple interface for adding popovers to your application. It extends the boostrap-twipsy.js plugin, so be sure to grab that file as well when including popovers in your project! |
Nope! Bootstrap is designed first and foremost to be a CSS library. This javascript provides a basic interactive layer on top of the included styles.
However, for those who do need javascript, we've provided the plugins above to help you understand how to integrate Bootstrap with javascript and to give you a quick, lightweight option for the basic functionality right away.
For more information and to see some live demos, please refer to our plugin documentation page.
Bootstrap was built from Preboot, an open-source pack of mixins and variables to be used in conjunction with Less, a CSS preprocessor for faster and easier web development.
Check out how we used Preboot in Bootstrap and how you can make use of it should you choose to run Less on your next project.
Use this option to make full use of Bootstrap’s Less variables, mixins, and nesting in CSS via javascript in your browser.
<link rel="stylesheet/less" href="less/bootstrap.less" media="all" /> <script src="js/less-1.1.3.min.js"></script>
Not feeling the .js solution? Try the Less Mac app or use Node.js to compile when you deploy your code.
Here are some of the highlights of what’s included in Twitter Bootstrap as part of Bootstrap. Head over to the Bootstrap website or Github project page to download and learn more.
Variables in Less are perfect for maintaining and updating your CSS headache free. When you want to change a color value or a frequently used value, update it in one spot and you’re set.
// Links @linkColor: #8b59c2; @linkColorHover: darken(@linkColor, 10); // Grays @black: #000; @grayDark: lighten(@black, 25%); @gray: lighten(@black, 50%); @grayLight: lighten(@black, 70%); @grayLighter: lighten(@black, 90%); @white: #fff; // Accent Colors @blue: #08b5fb; @green: #46a546; @red: #9d261d; @yellow: #ffc40d; @orange: #f89406; @pink: #c3325f; @purple: #7a43b6; // Baseline grid @basefont: 13px; @baseline: 18px;
Less also provides another style of commenting in addition to CSS’s normal /* ... */
syntax.
// This is a comment /* This is also a comment */
Mixins are basically includes or partials for CSS, allowing you to combine a block of code into one. They’re great for vendor prefixed properties like box-shadow
, cross-browser gradients, font stacks, and more. Below is a sample of the mixins that are included with Bootstrap.
#font { .shorthand(@weight: normal, @size: 14px, @lineHeight: 20px) { font-size: @size; font-weight: @weight; line-height: @lineHeight; } .sans-serif(@weight: normal, @size: 14px, @lineHeight: 20px) { font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: @size; font-weight: @weight; line-height: @lineHeight; } ... }
#gradient { ... .vertical (@startColor: #555, @endColor: #333) { background-color: @endColor; background-repeat: repeat-x; background-image: -khtml-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, from(@startColor), to(@endColor)); // Konqueror background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(@startColor, @endColor); // FF 3.6+ background-image: -ms-linear-gradient(@startColor, @endColor); // IE10 background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, color-stop(0%, @startColor), color-stop(100%, @endColor)); // Safari 4+, Chrome 2+ background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(@startColor, @endColor); // Safari 5.1+, Chrome 10+ background-image: -o-linear-gradient(@startColor, @endColor); // Opera 11.10 background-image: linear-gradient(@startColor, @endColor); // The standard } ... }
Get fancy and perform some math to generate flexible and powerful mixins like the one below.
// Griditude @gridColumns: 16; @gridColumnWidth: 40px; @gridGutterWidth: 20px; @siteWidth: (@gridColumns * @gridColumnWidth) + (@gridGutterWidth * (@gridColumns - 1)); // Make some columns .columns(@columnSpan: 1) { width: (@gridColumnWidth * @columnSpan) + (@gridGutterWidth * (@columnSpan - 1)); }
After modifying the .less
files in /lib/, you'll need to recompile them in order to regenerate the bootstrap-*.*.*.css and bootstrap-*.*.*.min.css files. If you're submitting a pull request to GitHub, you must always recompile.
Method | Steps |
---|---|
Node with makefile |
Install the less command line compiler with npm by running the following command: $ npm install lessc Once installed just run Additionally, if you have watchr installed, you may run |
Javascript |
Download the latest Less.js and include the path to it (and Bootstrap) in the <link rel="stylesheet/less" href="/path/to/bootstrap.less"> <script src="/path/to/less.js"></script> To recompile the .less files, just save them and reload your page. Less.js compiles them and stores them in local storage. |
Command line |
If you already have the less command line tool installed, simply run the following command: $ lessc ./lib/bootstrap.less > bootstrap.css Be sure to include |
Less Mac app |
The unofficial Mac app watches directories of .less files and compiles the code to local files after every save of a watched .less file. If you like, you can toggle preferences in the app for automatic minifying and which directory the compiled files end up in. |