Dozens of reusable components built to provide navigation, alerts, popovers, and more.
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.
Links are customizable for different circumstances. Use .disabled
for unclickable links and .active
to indicate the current page.
Fancy larger or smaller pagination? Add .pagination-large
, .pagination-small
, or .pagination-mini
for additional sizes.
Add one of two optional classes to change the alignment of pagination links: .pagination-centered
and .pagination-right
.
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.
Alternatively, you can align each link to the sides:
Pager links also use the general .disabled
utility class from the pagination.
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>
|
For easy implementation, labels and badges will simply collapse (via CSS's :empty
selector) when no content exists within.
A lightweight, flexible component to showcase key content on your site. It works well on marketing and content-heavy sites.
This is a simple hero unit, a simple jumbotron-style component for calling extra attention to featured content or information.
A simple shell for an h1
to appropriately space out and segment sections of content on a page. It can utilize the h1
's default small
, element as well most other components (with additional styles).
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:
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.
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
.
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Add optional classes to change an alert's connotation.
Default progress bar with a vertical gradient.
Uses a gradient to create a striped effect. Not available in IE7-8.
Add .active
to .progress-striped
to animate the stripes right to left. Not available in all versions of IE.
Place multiple bars into the same .progress
to stack them.
Progress bars use some of the same button and alert classes for consistent styles.
Similar to the solid colors, we have varied striped progress bars.
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.
Abstract object styles for building various types of components (like blog comments, Tweets, etc) that feature a left- or right-aligned image alongside textual content.
The default media allow to float a media object (images, video, audio) to the left or right of a content block.
With a bit of extra markup, you can use media inside list (useful for comment threads or articles lists).
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