bootstrap-sass
is an Sass-powered version of Twitter's Bootstrap, ready to drop right into your Sass powered applications.
Enjoy.
Updating your application to a new version of bootstrap-sass
? See our changelog, Bootstrap's changelog, and this guide to updating to Bootstrap 2.0
In your Gemfile:
gem 'sass-rails', '~> 3.1'
gem 'bootstrap-sass', '~> 2.0.4.0'
Import "bootstrap" in your SCSS file of choice to get all of Bootstrap's styles, mixins and variables! We recommend against using //= require
directives, since none of your other stylesheets will be able to use the awesome mixins that Bootstrap has defined.
@import "bootstrap";
You can include the Bootstrap javascripts through two methods. In this case, Sprocket's //= require
directives are useful, since there is no better alternative.
We have a helper that includes all available javascripts:
// Loads all Bootstrap javascripts
//= require bootstrap
You can also load individual modules, provided you sort out any related dependencies.
//= require bootstrap-scrollspy
//= require bootstrap-modal
//= require bootstrap-dropdown
Simples.
bootstrap-sass
2.0 now comes with support for Compass, meaning projects that don't use Rails can get in on the fun Bootstrap web.
Install the gem and create a new project using the gem.
gem install bootstrap-sass
compass create compass-test -r bootstrap-sass --using bootstrap
This will sort a few things out:
- You'll get a starting
styles.scss
ready for your alterations - You'll get a compiled stylesheet compiled & ready to drop into your application
- We'll also copy the Bootstrap javascripts & images into their respective folders for you, absolutely free of charge! How cool is that?
Install the gem, add the require statement to the top of your configuration file, and install the extension.
gem install bootstrap-sass
# In config.rb
require 'bootstrap-sass'
compass install bootstrap
You'll get the same benefits as those starting from scratch. Radical.
Need to configure a variable or two? Simply define the value of the variable you want to change before importing Bootstrap. Sass will respect your existing definition rather than overwriting it with the Bootstrap defaults. A list of customisable variables can be found in the Bootstrap documentation.
$btnPrimaryBackground: #f00;
@import "bootstrap";
Note: It's important that the file you are importing is not named bootstrap
, since this will cause an import loop. As a general rule, errors are something you should try to avoid.
Some CSS3 properties take multiple values, such as box-shadow
or text-shadow
. To pass multiple values to the Bootstrap mixins, you must escape the values or else the Sass parser will choke on the commas. Here's how to escape the values in Sass:
.selector {
@include box-shadow(#{0 2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,.25) inset, 0 -2px 5px rgba(0,0,0,.25) inset});
}
As per the Bootstrap project we don't include the responsive styles by default. @import "bootstrap-responsive";
to get them.
Bootstrap claims to use SemVer, although this is for values of public API that don't seem to include selectively requiring CSS components (see breaking change 2.0.2 -> 2.0.3). Since many people using bootstrap-sass do selectively require CSS components and I consider it part of the public API we can't really follow SemVer without becoming wildly out of sync with the Bootstrap version number, which is confusing for everyone involved. Further releases to bootstrap-sass will therefore have version numbers of the form 2.x.x.y
, where 2.x.x
is the release of Bootstrap we should be compatible with, and y
is the patch version.
gem 'bootstrap-sass', '~> 2.0.4.0'
Don't use the standard ~> 2.0.x
please. Your apps may break.
bootstrap-sass is a project by Thomas McDonald, with support from other awesome people.
bootstrap-sass is used to build some awesome projects, including Diaspora, rails_admin, Michael Hartl's Rails Tutorial and gitlabhq. Using bootstrap-sass? I'd love it if you let me know through Twitter.