Button styles can be applied to anything with the .btn
class applied. However, typically you'll want to apply these to only <a>
and <button>
elements for the best rendering.
Button | class="" | Description |
---|---|---|
btn |
Standard gray button with gradient | |
btn btn-primary |
Provides extra visual weight and identifies the primary action in a set of buttons | |
btn btn-info |
Used as an alternative to the default styles | |
btn btn-success |
Indicates a successful or positive action | |
btn btn-warning |
Indicates caution should be taken with this action | |
btn btn-danger |
Indicates a dangerous or potentially negative action | |
btn btn-inverse |
Alternate dark gray button, not tied to a semantic action or use | |
btn btn-link |
Deemphasize a button by making it look like a link while maintaining button behavior |
IE9 doesn't crop background gradients on rounded corners, so we remove it. Related, IE9 jankifies disabled button
elements, rendering text gray with a nasty text-shadow that we cannot fix.
Fancy larger or smaller buttons? Add .btn-large
, .btn-small
, or .btn-mini
for additional sizes.
<p> <button class="btn btn-large btn-primary" type="button">Large button</button> <button class="btn btn-large" type="button">Large button</button> </p> <p> <button class="btn btn-primary" type="button">Default button</button> <button class="btn" type="button">Default button</button> </p> <p> <button class="btn btn-small btn-primary" type="button">Small button</button> <button class="btn btn-small" type="button">Small button</button> </p> <p> <button class="btn btn-mini btn-primary" type="button">Mini button</button> <button class="btn btn-mini" type="button">Mini button</button> </p>
Create block level buttons—those that span the full width of a parent— by adding .btn-block
.
<button class="btn btn-large btn-block btn-primary" type="button">Block level button</button> <button class="btn btn-large btn-block" type="button">Block level button</button>
Add the .disabled
class to <a>
buttons.
<a href="#" class="btn btn-large btn-primary disabled">Primary link</a> <a href="#" class="btn btn-large disabled">Link</a>
Heads up! We use .disabled
as a utility class here, similar to the common .active
class, so no prefix is required. Also, this class is only for aesthetic; you must use custom JavaScript to disable links here.
Add the disabled
attribute to <button>
buttons.
<button type="button" class="btn btn-large btn-primary disabled" disabled="disabled">Primary button</button> <button type="button" class="btn btn-large" disabled>Button</button>
For basic styling—light padding and only horizontal dividers—add the base class .table
to any <table>
.
# | First Name | Last Name | Username |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark | Otto | @mdo |
2 | Jacob | Thornton | @fat |
3 | Larry | the Bird |
<table class="table"> … </table>
Add any of the follow classes to the .table
base class.
.table-striped
Adds zebra-striping to any table row within the <tbody>
via the :nth-child
CSS selector (not available in IE7-IE8).
# | First Name | Last Name | Username |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark | Otto | @mdo |
2 | Jacob | Thornton | @fat |
3 | Larry | the Bird |
<table class="table table-striped"> … </table>
.table-bordered
Add borders and rounded corners to the table.
# | First Name | Last Name | Username |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark | Otto | @mdo |
Mark | Otto | @TwBootstrap | |
2 | Jacob | Thornton | @fat |
3 | Larry the Bird |
<table class="table table-bordered"> … </table>
.table-hover
Enable a hover state on table rows within a <tbody>
.
# | First Name | Last Name | Username |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark | Otto | @mdo |
2 | Jacob | Thornton | @fat |
3 | Larry the Bird |
<table class="table table-hover"> … </table>
.table-condensed
Makes tables more compact by cutting cell padding in half.
# | First Name | Last Name | Username |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark | Otto | @mdo |
2 | Jacob | Thornton | @fat |
3 | Larry the Bird |
<table class="table table-condensed"> … </table>
Use contextual classes to color table rows.
Class | Description |
---|---|
.success |
Indicates a successful or positive action. |
.error |
Indicates a dangerous or potentially negative action. |
.warning |
Indicates a warning that might need attention. |
.info |
Used as an alternative to the default styles. |
# | Product | Payment Taken | Status |
---|---|---|---|
1 | TB - Monthly | 01/04/2012 | Approved |
2 | TB - Monthly | 02/04/2012 | Declined |
3 | TB - Monthly | 03/04/2012 | Pending |
4 | TB - Monthly | 04/04/2012 | Call in to confirm |
... <tr class="success"> <td>1</td> <td>TB - Monthly</td> <td>01/04/2012</td> <td>Approved</td> </tr> ...
List of supported table HTML elements and how they should be used.
Tag | Description |
---|---|
<table> |
Wrapping element for displaying data in a tabular format |
<thead> |
Container element for table header rows (<tr> ) to label table columns |
<tbody> |
Container element for table rows (<tr> ) in the body of the table |
<tr> |
Container element for a set of table cells (<td> or <th> ) that appears on a single row |
<td> |
Default table cell |
<th> |
Special table cell for column (or row, depending on scope and placement) labels Must be used within a <thead> |
<caption> |
Description or summary of what the table holds, especially useful for screen readers |
<table> <caption>...</caption> <thead> <tr> <th>...</th> <th>...</th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr> <td>...</td> <td>...</td> </tr> </tbody> &tt;/table>
Individual form controls receive styling, but without any required base class on the <form>
or large changes in markup. Results in stacked, left-aligned labels on top of form controls.
<form> <legend>Legend</legend> <label>Label name</label> <input type="text" placeholder="Type something…"> <span class="help-block">Example block-level help text here.</span> <label class="checkbox"> <input type="checkbox"> Check me out </label> <button type="submit" class="btn">Submit</button> </form>
Included with Bootstrap are three optional form layouts for common use cases.
Add .form-search
to the form and .search-query
to the <input>
for an extra-rounded text input.
<form class="form-search"> <input type="text" class="input-medium search-query"> <button type="submit" class="btn">Search</button> </form>
Add .form-inline
for left-aligned labels and inline-block controls for a compact layout.
<form class="form-inline"> <input type="text" class="input-small" placeholder="Email"> <input type="password" class="input-small" placeholder="Password"> <label class="checkbox"> <input type="checkbox"> Remember me </label> <button type="submit" class="btn">Sign in</button> </form>
Right align labels and float them to the left to make them appear on the same line as controls. Requires the most markup changes from a default form:
.form-horizontal
to the form.control-group
.control-label
to the label.controls
for proper alignment<form class="form-horizontal"> <div class="control-group"> <label class="control-label" for="inputEmail">Email</label> <div class="controls"> <input type="text" id="inputEmail" placeholder="Email"> </div> </div> <div class="control-group"> <label class="control-label" for="inputPassword">Password</label> <div class="controls"> <input type="password" id="inputPassword" placeholder="Password"> </div> </div> <div class="control-group"> <div class="controls"> <label class="checkbox"> <input type="checkbox"> Remember me </label> <button type="submit" class="btn">Sign in</button> </div> </div> </form>
Examples of standard form controls supported in an example form layout.
Most common form control, text-based input fields. Includes support for all HTML5 types: text, password, datetime, datetime-local, date, month, time, week, number, email, url, search, tel, and color.
Requires the use of a specified type
at all times.
<input type="text" placeholder="Text input">
Form control which supports multiple lines of text. Change rows
attribute as necessary.
<textarea rows="3"></textarea>
Checkboxes are for selecting one or several options in a list while radios are for selecting one option from many.
<label class="checkbox"> <input type="checkbox" value=""> Option one is this and that—be sure to include why it's great </label> <label class="radio"> <input type="radio" name="optionsRadios" id="optionsRadios1" value="option1" checked> Option one is this and that—be sure to include why it's great </label> <label class="radio"> <input type="radio" name="optionsRadios" id="optionsRadios2" value="option2"> Option two can be something else and selecting it will deselect option one </label>
Add the .inline
class to a series of checkboxes or radios for controls appear on the same line.
<label class="checkbox inline"> <input type="checkbox" id="inlineCheckbox1" value="option1"> 1 </label> <label class="checkbox inline"> <input type="checkbox" id="inlineCheckbox2" value="option2"> 2 </label> <label class="checkbox inline"> <input type="checkbox" id="inlineCheckbox3" value="option3"> 3 </label>
Use the default option or specify a multiple="multiple"
to show multiple options at once.
<select> <option>1</option> <option>2</option> <option>3</option> <option>4</option> <option>5</option> </select> <select multiple="multiple"> <option>1</option> <option>2</option> <option>3</option> <option>4</option> <option>5</option> </select>
Adding on top of existing browser controls, Bootstrap includes other useful form components.
Add text or buttons before or after any text-based input. Do note that select
elements are not supported here.
Wrap an .add-on
and an input
with one of two classes to prepend or append text to an input.
<div class="input-prepend"> <span class="add-on">@</span><input class="span2" id="prependedInput" size="16" type="text" placeholder="Username"> </div> <div class="input-append"> <input class="span2" id="appendedInput" size="16" type="text"><span class="add-on">.00</span> </div>
Use both classes and two instances of .add-on
to prepend and append an input.
<div class="input-prepend input-append"> <span class="add-on">$</span><input class="span2" id="appendedPrependedInput" size="16" type="text"><span class="add-on">.00</span> </div>
Instead of a <span>
with text, use a .btn
to attach a button (or two) to an input.
<div class="input-append"> <input class="span2" id="appendedInputButton" size="16" type="text"><button class="btn" type="button">Go!</button> </div> <div class="input-append"> <input class="span2" id="appendedInputButtons" size="16" type="text"><button class="btn" type="button">Search</button><button class="btn" type="button">Options</button> </div>
<form class="form-search"> <div class="input-append"> <input type="text" class="span2 search-query"> <button type="submit" class="btn">Search</button> </div> <div class="input-prepend"> <button type="submit" class="btn">Search</button> <input type="text" class="span2 search-query"> </div> </form>
Use relative sizing classes like .input-large
or match your inputs to the grid column sizes using .span*
classes.
<input class="input-mini" type="text" placeholder=".input-mini"> <input class="input-small" type="text" placeholder=".input-small"> <input class="input-medium" type="text" placeholder=".input-medium"> <input class="input-large" type="text" placeholder=".input-large"> <input class="input-xlarge" type="text" placeholder=".input-xlarge"> <input class="input-xxlarge" type="text" placeholder=".input-xxlarge">
Heads up! In future versions, we'll be altering the use of these relative input classes to match our button sizes. For example, .input-large
will increase the padding and font-size of an input.
Use .span1
to .span12
for inputs that match the same sizes of the grid columns.
<input class="span1" type="text" placeholder=".span1"> <input class="span2" type="text" placeholder=".span2"> <input class="span3" type="text" placeholder=".span3"> <select class="span1"> ... </select> <select class="span2"> ... </select> <select class="span3"> ... </select>
For multiple grid inputs per line, use the .controls-row
modifier class for proper spacing. It floats the inputs to collapse white-space, sets the proper margins, and the clears the float.
<div class="controls"> <input class="span5" type="text" placeholder=".span5"> </div> <div class="controls controls-row"> <input class="span4" type="text" placeholder=".span4"> <input class="span1" type="text" placeholder=".span1"> </div> ...
Present data in a form that's not editable without using actual form markup.
<span class="input-xlarge uneditable-input">Some value here</span>
End a form with a group of actions (buttons). When placed within a .form-horizontal
, the buttons will automatically indent to line up with the form controls.
<div class="form-actions"> <button type="submit" class="btn btn-primary">Save changes</button> <button type="button" class="btn">Cancel</button> </div>
Inline and block level support for help text that appears around form controls.
<input type="text"><span class="help-inline">Inline help text</span>
<input type="text"><span class="help-block">A longer block of help text that breaks onto a new line and may extend beyond one line.</span>
Provide feedback to users or visitors with basic feedback states on form controls and labels.
We remove the default outline
styles on some form controls and apply a box-shadow
in its place for :focus
.
<input class="input-xlarge" id="focusedInput" type="text" value="This is focused...">
Add the disabled
attribute on an input to prevent user input and trigger a slightly different look.
<input class="input-xlarge" id="disabledInput" type="text" placeholder="Disabled input here..." disabled>
Bootstrap includes validation styles for error, warning, info, and success messages. To use, add the appropriate class to the surrounding .control-group
.
<div class="control-group warning"> <label class="control-label" for="inputWarning">Input with warning</label> <div class="controls"> <input type="text" id="inputWarning"> <span class="help-inline">Something may have gone wrong</span> </div> </div> <div class="control-group error"> <label class="control-label" for="inputError">Input with error</label> <div class="controls"> <input type="text" id="inputError"> <span class="help-inline">Please correct the error</span> </div> </div> <div class="control-group success"> <label class="control-label" for="inputSuccess">Input with success</label> <div class="controls"> <input type="text" id="inputSuccess"> <span class="help-inline">Woohoo!</span> </div> </div>
Add classes to an <img>
element to easily style images in any project.
<img src="/..." class="img-rounded"> <img src="/..." class="img-circle"> <img src="/..." class="img-polaroid">
Heads up!
.img-rounded
and .img-circle
do not work in IE7-8 due to lack of border-radius
support.
By default, Bootstrap's thumbnails are designed to showcase linked images with minimal required markup.
With a bit of extra markup, it's possible to add any kind of HTML content like headings, paragraphs, or buttons into thumbnails.
Thumbnails (previously .media-grid
up until v1.4) are great for grids of photos or videos, image search results, retail products, portfolios, and much more. They can be links or static content.
Thumbnail markup is simple—a ul
with any number of li
elements is all that is required. It's also super flexible, allowing for any type of content with just a bit more markup to wrap your contents.
Lastly, the thumbnails component uses existing grid system classes—like .span2
or .span3
—for control of thumbnail dimensions.
As mentioned previously, the required markup for thumbnails is light and straightforward. Here's a look at the default setup for linked images:
<ul class="thumbnails"> <li class="span4"> <a href="#" class="thumbnail"> <img src="/images/stories/300x200.jpg" alt=""> </a> </li> ... </ul>
For custom HTML content in thumbnails, the markup changes slightly. To allow block level content anywhere, we swap the <a>
for a <div>
like so:
<ul class="thumbnails"> <li class="span4"> <div class="thumbnail"> <img src="/images/stories/300x200.jpg" alt=""> <h3>Thumbnail label</h3> <p>Thumbnail caption...</p> </div> </li> ... </ul>
Explore all your options with the various grid classes available to you. You can also mix and match different sizes.
Wrap any text and an optional dismiss button in .alert
for a basic warning alert message.
<div class="alert"> <button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</button> <strong>Warning!</strong> Best check yo self, you're not looking too good. </div>
Mobile Safari and Mobile Opera browsers, in addition to the data-dismiss="alert"
attribute, require an href="#"
for the dismissal of alerts when using an <a>
tag.
<a href="#" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</a>
Alternatively, you may use a <button>
element with the data attribute, which we have opted to do for our docs. When using <button>
, you must include type="button"
or your forms may not submit.
<button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</button>
Use the alerts jQuery plugin for quick and easy dismissal of alerts.
For longer messages, increase the padding on the top and bottom of the alert wrapper by adding .alert-block
.
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.
<div class="alert alert-block"> <button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</button> <h4>Warning!</h4> Best check yo self, you're not... </div>
Add optional classes to change an alert's connotation.
<div class="alert alert-error"> ... </div>
<div class="alert alert-success"> ... </div>
<div class="alert alert-info"> ... </div>
Default progress bar with a vertical gradient.
<div class="progress"> <div class="bar" style="width: 60%;"></div> </div>
Uses a gradient to create a striped effect. Not available in IE7-8.
<div class="progress progress-striped"> <div class="bar" style="width: 20%;"></div> </div>
Add .active
to .progress-striped
to animate the stripes right to left. Not available in all versions of IE.
<div class="progress progress-striped active"> <div class="bar" style="width: 40%;"></div> </div>
Place multiple bars into the same .progress
to stack them.
<div class="progress"> <div class="bar bar-success" style="width: 35%;"></div> <div class="bar bar-warning" style="width: 20%;"></div> <div class="bar bar-danger" style="width: 10%;"></div> </div>
Progress bars use some of the same button and alert classes for consistent styles.
<div class="progress progress-info"> <div class="bar" style="width: 20%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-success"> <div class="bar" style="width: 40%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-warning"> <div class="bar" style="width: 60%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-danger"> <div class="bar" style="width: 80%"></div> </div>
Similar to the solid colors, we have varied striped progress bars.
<div class="progress progress-info progress-striped"> <div class="bar" style="width: 20%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-success progress-striped"> <div class="bar" style="width: 40%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-warning progress-striped"> <div class="bar" style="width: 60%"></div> </div> <div class="progress progress-danger progress-striped"> <div class="bar" style="width: 80%"></div> </div>
Progress bars use CSS3 gradients, transitions, and animations to achieve all their effects. These features are not supported in IE7-9 or older versions of Firefox.
Versions earlier than Internet Explorer 10 and Opera 12 do not support animations.
Toggleable, contextual menu for displaying lists of links. Made interactive with the dropdown javascript plugin .
<ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dropdownMenu"> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Action</a></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Another action</a></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Something else here</a></li> <li class="divider"></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Separated link</a></li> </ul>
Looking at just the dropdown menu, here's the required HTML. You need to wrap the dropdown's trigger and the dropdown menu within .dropdown
, or another element that declares position: relative;
. Then just create the menu.
<div class="dropdown"> <!-- Link or button to toggle dropdown --> <ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dLabel"> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Action</a></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Another action</a></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Something else here</a></li> <li class="divider"></li> <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Separated link</a></li> </ul> </div>
Align menus to the right and add include additional levels of dropdowns.
Add .pull-right
to a .dropdown-menu
to right align the dropdown menu.
<ul class="dropdown-menu pull-right" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dLabel"> ... </ul>
Add an extra level of dropdown menus, appearing on hover like those of OS X, with some simple markup additions. Add .dropdown-submenu
to any li
in an existing dropdown menu for automatic styling.
<ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dLabel"> ... <li class="dropdown-submenu"> <a tabindex="-1" href="#">More options</a> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> ... </ul> </li> </ul>
Add data-toggle="dropdown"
to a link or button to toggle a dropdown.
<div class="dropdown"> <a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#">Dropdown trigger</a> <ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dLabel"> ... </ul> </div>
To keep URLs intact, use the data-target
attribute instead of href="#"
.
<div class="dropdown"> <a class="dropdown-toggle" id="dLabel" role="button" data-toggle="dropdown" data-target="#" href="/page.html"> Dropdown <b class="caret"></b> </a> <ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu" aria-labelledby="dLabel"> ... </ul> </div>
Call the dropdowns via JavaScript:
$('.dropdown-toggle').dropdown()
None
A programatic api for activating menus for a given navbar or tabbed navigation.
Two basic options, along with two more specific variations.
Wrap a series of buttons with .btn
in .btn-group
.
<div class="btn-group"> <button class="btn">1</button> <button class="btn">2</button> <button class="btn">3</button> </div>
Combine sets of <div class="btn-group">
into a <div class="btn-toolbar">
for more complex components.
<div class="btn-toolbar"> <div class="btn-group"> ... </div> </div>
Make a set of buttons appear vertically stacked rather than horizontally.
<div class="btn-group btn-group-vertical"> ... </div>
Button groups can also function as radios, where only one button may be active, or checkboxes, where any number of buttons may be active. View the Javascript docs for that.
Heads up! Buttons with dropdowns must be individually wrapped in their own .btn-group
within a .btn-toolbar
for proper rendering.
Use any button to trigger a dropdown menu by placing it within a .btn-group
and providing the proper menu markup.
<div class="btn-group"> <a class="btn dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#"> Action <span class="caret"></span> </a> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- dropdown menu links --> </ul> </div>
Button dropdowns work at any size: .btn-large
, .btn-small
, or .btn-mini
.
Button dropdowns require the Bootstrap dropdown plugin to function.
In some cases—like mobile—dropdown menus will extend outside the viewport. You need to resolve the alignment manually or with custom javascript.
Building on the button group styles and markup, we can easily create a split button. Split buttons feature a standard action on the left and a dropdown toggle on the right with contextual links.
<div class="btn-group"> <button class="btn">Action</button> <button class="btn dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown"> <span class="caret"></span> </button> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- dropdown menu links --> </ul> </div>
Utilize the extra button classes .btn-mini
, .btn-small
, or .btn-large
for sizing.
<div class="btn-group"> <button class="btn btn-mini">Action</button> <button class="btn btn-mini dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown"> <span class="caret"></span> </button> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- dropdown menu links --> </ul> </div>
Dropdown menus can also be toggled from the bottom up by adding a single class to the immediate parent of .dropdown-menu
. It will flip the direction of the .caret
and reposition the menu itself to move from the bottom up instead of top down.
<div class="btn-group dropup"> <button class="btn">Dropup</button> <button class="btn dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown"> <span class="caret"></span> </button> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- dropdown menu links --> </ul> </div>
All nav components here—tabs, pills, and lists—share the same base markup and styles through the .nav
class.
Take a regular <ul>
of links and add .nav-tabs
:
<ul class="nav nav-tabs"> <li class="active"> <a href="#">Home</a> </li> <li><a href="#">...</a></li> <li><a href="#">...</a></li> </ul>
Take that same HTML, but use .nav-pills
instead:
<ul class="nav nav-pills"> <li class="active"> <a href="#">Home</a> </li> <li><a href="#">...</a></li> <li><a href="#">...</a></li> </ul>
For any nav component (tabs, pills, or list), add .disabled
for gray links and no hover effects. Links will remain clickable, however, unless custom javascript is implemented to prevent those clicks.
<ul class="nav nav-pills"> ... <li class="disabled"><a href="#">Home</a></li> ... </ul>
To align nav links, use the .pull-left
or .pull-right
utility classes. Both classes will add a CSS float in the specified direction.
As tabs and pills are horizontal by default, just add a second class, .nav-stacked
, to make them appear vertically stacked.
<ul class="nav nav-tabs nav-stacked"> ... </ul>
<ul class="nav nav-pills nav-stacked"> ... </ul>
Add dropdown menus with a little extra HTML and the dropdowns javascript plugin .
<ul class="nav nav-tabs"> <li class="dropdown"> <a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#"> Dropdown <b class="caret"></b> </a> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- links --> </ul> </li> </ul>
<ul class="nav nav-pills"> <li class="dropdown"> <a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#"> Dropdown <b class="caret"></b> </a> <ul class="dropdown-menu"> <!-- links --> </ul> </li> </ul>
A simple and easy way to build groups of nav links with optional headers. They're best used in sidebars like the Finder in OS X.
Take a list of links and add class="nav nav-list"
:
<ul class="nav nav-list"> <li class="nav-header">List header</li> <li class="active"><a href="#">Home</a></li> <li><a href="#">Library</a></li> ... </ul>
Note For nesting within a nav list, include class="nav nav-list"
on any nested <ul>
.
Add a horizontal divider by creating an empty list item with the class .divider
, like so:
<ul class="nav nav-list"> ... <li class="divider"></li> ... </ul>
Bring your tabs to life with a simple plugin to toggle between content via tabs. Bootstrap integrates tabbable tabs in four styles: top (default), right, bottom, and left.
To make tabs tabbable, create a .tab-pane
with unique ID for every tab and wrap them in .tab-content
.
<div class="tabbable"> <!-- Only required for left/right tabs --> <ul class="nav nav-tabs"> <li class="active"><a href="#tab1" data-toggle="tab">Section 1</a></li> <li><a href="#tab2" data-toggle="tab">Section 2</a></li> </ul> <div class="tab-content"> <div class="tab-pane active" id="tab1"> <p>I'm in Section 1.</p> </div> <div class="tab-pane" id="tab2"> <p>Howdy, I'm in Section 2.</p> </div> </div> </div>
To make tabs fade in, add .fade
to each .tab-pane
.
Flip the order of the HTML and add a class to put tabs on the bottom.
<div class="tabbable tabs-below"> <div class="tab-content"> ... </div> <ul class="nav nav-tabs"> ... </ul> </div>
Swap the class to put tabs on the left.
<div class="tabbable tabs-left"> <ul class="nav nav-tabs"> ... </ul> <div class="tab-content"> ... </div> </div>
Swap the class to put tabs on the right.
<div class="tabbable tabs-right"> <ul class="nav nav-tabs"> ... </ul> <div class="tab-content"> ... </div> </div>
A single example shown as it might be displayed across multiple pages.
<ul class="breadcrumb"> <li><a href="#">Home</a> <span class="divider">/</span></li> <li><a href="#">Library</a> <span class="divider">/</span></li> <li class="active">Data</li> </ul>
Simple pagination inspired by Rdio, great for apps and search results. The large block is hard to miss, easily scalable, and provides large click areas.
<div class="pagination"> <ul> <li><a href="#">Prev</a></li> <li><a href="#">1</a></li> <li><a href="#">2</a></li> <li><a href="#">3</a></li> <li><a href="#">4</a></li> <li><a href="#">Next</a></li> </ul> </div>
Links are customizable for different circumstances. Use .disabled
for unclickable links and .active
to indicate the current page.
<div class="pagination"> <ul> <li class="disabled"><a href="#">Prev</a></li> <li class="active"><a href="#">1</a></li> ... </ul> </div>
You can optionally swap out active or disabled anchors for spans to remove click functionality while retaining intended styles.
<div class="pagination"> <ul> <li class="disabled"><span>Prev</span></li> <li class="active"><span>1</span></li> ... </ul> </div>
Add one of two optional classes to change the alignment of pagination links: .pagination-centered
and .pagination-right
.
<div class="pagination pagination-centered"> ... </div>
<div class="pagination pagination-right"> ... </div>
Quick previous and next links for simple pagination implementations with light markup and styles. It's great for simple sites like blogs or magazines.
By default, the pager centers links.
<ul class="pager"> <li><a href="#">Previous</a></li> <li><a href="#">Next</a></li> </ul>
Alternatively, you can align each link to the sides:
<ul class="pager"> <li class="previous"> <a href="#">← Older</a> </li> <li class="next"> <a href="#">Newer →</a> </li> </ul>
Pager links also use the general .disabled
utility class from the pagination.
<ul class="pager"> <li class="previous disabled"> <a href="#">← Older</a> </li> ... </ul>
Labels | Markup |
---|---|
Default | <span class="label">Default</span> |
Success | <span class="label label-success">Success</span> |
Warning | <span class="label label-warning">Warning</span> |
Important | <span class="label label-important">Important</span> |
Info | <span class="label label-info">Info</span> |
Inverse | <span class="label label-inverse">Inverse</span> |
Name | Example | Markup |
---|---|---|
Default | 1 | <span class="badge">1</span> |
Success | 2 | <span class="badge badge-success">2</span> |
Warning | 4 | <span class="badge badge-warning">4</span> |
Important | 6 | <span class="badge badge-important">6</span> |
Info | 8 | <span class="badge badge-info">8</span> |
Inverse | 10 | <span class="badge badge-inverse">10</span> |
Use the well as a simple effect on an element to give it an inset effect.
<div class="well"> ... </div>
Control padding and rounded corners with two optional modifier classes.
<div class="well well-large"> ... </div>
<div class="well well-small"> ... </div>
Use the generic close icon for dismissing content like modals and alerts.
<button class="close">×</button>
iOS devices require an href="#" for click events if you rather use an anchor.
<a class="close" href="#">×</a>
Simple, focused classes for small display or behavior tweaks.
Float an element left
class="pull-left"
.pull-left { float: left; }
Float an element right
class="pull-right"
.pull-right { float: right; }
Change an element's color to #999
class="muted"
.muted { color: #999; }
Clear the float
on any element
class="clearfix"
.clearfix { *zoom: 1; &:before, &:after { display: table; content: ""; } &:after { clear: both; } }