Bootstrap is a sleek, intuitive, and powerful front-end framework for faster and easier web development, created by Mark Otto and Jacob Thornton, and maintained by the core team with the massive support and involvement of the community.
To get started, check out https://getbootstrap.com!
- Quick start
- Bugs and feature requests
- Documentation
- Contributing
- Community
- Versioning
- Creators
- Copyright and license
Several quick start options are available:
- Download the latest release.
- Clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap.git
- Install with npm:
npm install [email protected]
- Install with Meteor:
meteor add twbs:bootstrap@=4.0.0-alpha.5
- Install with Composer:
composer require twbs/bootstrap
- Install with Bower:
bower install bootstrap#v4.0.0-alpha.5
- Install with NuGet: CSS:
Install-Package bootstrap -Pre
Sass:Install-Package bootstrap.sass -Pre
(-Pre
is only required until Bootstrap v4 has a stable release).
Read the Getting started page for information on the framework contents, templates and examples, and more.
Within the download you'll find the following directories and files, logically grouping common assets and providing both compiled and minified variations. You'll see something like this:
bootstrap/
├── css/
│ ├── bootstrap.css
│ ├── bootstrap.css.map
│ ├── bootstrap.min.css
│ └── bootstrap.min.css.map
└── js/
├── bootstrap.js
└── bootstrap.min.js
We provide compiled CSS and JS (bootstrap.*
), as well as compiled and minified CSS and JS (bootstrap.min.*
). CSS source maps (bootstrap.*.map
) are available for use with certain browsers' developer tools.
Have a bug or a feature request? Please first read the issue guidelines and search for existing and closed issues. If your problem or idea is not addressed yet, please open a new issue.
Bootstrap's documentation, included in this repo in the root directory, is built with Jekyll and publicly hosted on GitHub Pages at https://getbootstrap.com. The docs may also be run locally.
- Run through the tooling setup to install Jekyll (the site builder) and other Ruby dependencies with
bundle install
. - Run
grunt
(or a specific set of Grunt tasks) to rebuild distributed CSS and JavaScript files, as well as our docs assets. - From the root
/bootstrap
directory, runbundle exec jekyll serve
in the command line. - Open http://localhost:9001 in your browser, and voilà.
Learn more about using Jekyll by reading its documentation.
Documentation for v2.3.2 has been made available for the time being at https://getbootstrap.com/2.3.2/ while folks transition to Bootstrap 3.
Previous releases and their documentation are also available for download.
Please read through our contributing guidelines. Included are directions for opening issues, coding standards, and notes on development.
Moreover, if your pull request contains JavaScript patches or features, you must include relevant unit tests. All HTML and CSS should conform to the Code Guide, maintained by Mark Otto.
Editor preferences are available in the editor config for easy use in common text editors. Read more and download plugins at http://editorconfig.org.
Get updates on Bootstrap's development and chat with the project maintainers and community members.
- Follow @getbootstrap on Twitter.
- Read and subscribe to The Official Bootstrap Blog.
- Join the official Slack room.
- Chat with fellow Bootstrappers in IRC. On the
irc.freenode.net
server, in the##bootstrap
channel. - Implementation help may be found at Stack Overflow (tagged
bootstrap-4
). - Developers should use the keyword
bootstrap
on packages which modify or add to the functionality of Bootstrap when distributing through npm or similar delivery mechanisms for maximum discoverability.
For transparency into our release cycle and in striving to maintain backward compatibility, Bootstrap is maintained under the Semantic Versioning guidelines. Sometimes we screw up, but we'll adhere to those rules whenever possible.
See the Releases section of our GitHub project for changelogs for each release version of Bootstrap. Release announcement posts on the official Bootstrap blog contain summaries of the most noteworthy changes made in each release.
Mark Otto
Jacob Thornton
Code and documentation copyright 2011-2016 the Bootstrap Authors and Twitter, Inc. Code released under the MIT License. Docs released under Creative Commons.