8.8 KiB
layout | title | group |
---|---|---|
docs | Migrating to v4 | migration |
Bootstrap 4 is a major rewrite of almost the entire project. The most notable changes are summarized immediately below, followed by more specific class and behavioral changes to relevant components.
{% callout info %} Heads up! This will be in flux as work on the v4 alphas progresses. Until then consider it incomplete, and we'd love pull requests to help keep it up to date. {% endcallout %}
Summary
Here are the big ticket items you'll want to be aware of when moving from v3 to v4.
Browser support
- Dropped IE8 and iOS 6 support. v4 is now only IE9+ and iOS 7+. For sites needing either of those, use v3.
- Added official support for Android v5.0 Lollipop's Browser and WebView. Earlier versions of the Android Browser and WebView remain only unofficially supported.
Global changes
- Switched from LESS to SCSS for our source CSS files.
- Switched from
px
torem
as our primary CSS unit. - Media queries are now in
em
s instead ofpx
s. - Global font-size increased from
14px
to16px
. - Added a new grid tier for ~
480px
and below. - Replaced the separate optional theme with configurable options via SCSS variables (e.g.,
$enable-gradients: true
).
Components
- Dropped panels, thumbnails, and wells for a new all-encompassing component, cards.
- Dropped the Glyphicons icon font.
- Dropped the Affix jQuery plugin. We recommend using a
position: sticky
polyfill instead. See the HTML5 Please entry for details and specific polyfill recommendations. - Refactored nearly all components to use more unnested classes instead of children selectors.
Misc
- Non-responsive usage of Bootstrap is no longer supported.
- Dropped the online Customizer in favor of more extensive setup documentation and customized builds.
By component
This list highlights key changes by component between v3.x.x and v4.0.0.
Reboot
New to Bootstrap 4 is the Reboot, a new stylesheet that builds on Normalize with our own somewhat opinionated reset styles. Selectors appearing in this file only use elements—there are no classes here. This isolates our reset styles from our component styles for a more modular approach. Some of the most important resets this includes are the box-sizing: border
change, moving from rem
to em
units on many elements, link styles, and many form element resets.
Typography
- Moved all
.text-
utilities to the_utilities.scss
file. - Dropped the
.page-header
class entirely. .dl-horizontal
now requires grid classes, increasing flexbility in column widths.- Custom
<blockquote>
styling has moved to classes—.blockquote
and the.blockquote-reverse
modifier.
Tables
- Nearly all instances of the
>
selector have been removed, meaning nested tables will now automatically inherit styles from their parents. This greatly simplifies our selectors and potential customizations. - Responsive tables no longer require a wrapping element. Instead, just put the
.table-responsive
right on the<table>
. - Renamed
.table-condensed
to.table-sm
for consistency. - Added a new
.table-inverse
option. - Added a new
.table-reflow
option. - Added table header modifers:
.thead-default
and.thead-inverse
Forms
- Moved element resets to the
_reboot.scss
file. - Renamed
.input-lg
and.input-sm
to.form-control-lg
and.form-control-sm
, respectively. - Dropped
.form-group-*
classes for simplicity's sake. Use.form-control-*
classes instead now. - Horizontal forms overhauled:
- Dropped the
.form-horizontal
class requirement. .form-group
no longer mixins the.row
class, so it's now required for grid layouts.- Added new
.form-control-label
class to vertically center labels with.form-control
s.
- Dropped the
Grid system
- Added a new
~480px
grid breakpoint, meaning there are now five total tiers.
Buttons
- Dropped the
.btn-xs
class entirely.
Button group
- Dropped the
.btn-group-xs
class entirely.
Navs
- Dropped nearly all
>
selectors for simpler styling via un-nested classes. - Instead of HTML-specific selectors like
.nav > li > a
, we use separate classes for.nav
s,.nav-item
s, and.nav-link
s. This makes your HTML more flexible while bringing along increased extensibility.
Pager
- Renamed
.previous
and.next
to.pager-prev
and.pager-next
.
Panels, thumbnails, and wells
Dropped entirely for the new card component.
Carousel
- Renamed
.item
to.carousel-item
.
Documentation
Our documentation received an upgrade across the board as well. Here's the low down:
- We're still using Jekyll, but we have custom plugins in the mix:
example.rb
is a fork of the defaulthighlight.rb
plugin, allowing for easier example-code handling.callout.rb
is a similar fork of that, but designed for our special docs callouts.
- All docs content has been rewritten in Markdown (instead of HTML) for easier editing.
- Pages have been reorganized for simpler content and a more approachable hierarchy.
- We moved from regular CSS to SCSS to take full advantage of Bootstrap's variables, mixins, and more.
What's new
We've added new components and changed some existing ones. Here are the new or updated styles.
Component | Description |
---|---|
Cards | New, more flexible component to replace v3's panels, thumbnails, and wells. |
New navbar | Replaces the previous navbar with a new, simpler component. |
New progress bars | Replaces the old .progress <div> with a real <progress> element. |
New table variants | Adds .table-inverse , table head options, replaces .table-condensed with .table-sm , and .table-reflow . |
New utility classes |
TODO: audit new classes that didn't exist in v3
What's removed
The following components have been removed in v4.0.0.
Component | Removed from 3.x.x | 4.0.0 Equivalent |
---|---|---|
Panels | Cards | |
Thumbnails | Cards | |
Wells | Cards | |
Justified navs |
TODO: audit classes in v4 that aren't present in v4
Responsive utilities
The following deprecated variables have been removed in v4.0.0:
@screen-phone
,@screen-tablet
,@screen-desktop
,@screen-lg-desktop
. Use the more abstract$screen-{xs,sm,md,lg,xl}-*
variables instead.@screen-sm
,@screen-md
,@screen-lg
. Use the more clearly named$screen-{xs,sm,md,lg,xl}-min
variables instead.@screen-xs
,@screen-xs-min
. The extra small breakpoint has no lower bound, so these variables were logically absurd. Reformulate your expression in terms of$screen-xs-max
instead.
The responsive utility classes have also been overhauled.
- The old classes (
.hidden-xs
.hidden-sm
.hidden-md
.hidden-lg
.visible-xs-block
.visible-xs-inline
.visible-xs-inline-block
.visible-sm-block
.visible-sm-inline
.visible-sm-inline-block
.visible-md-block
.visible-md-inline
.visible-md-inline-block
.visible-lg-block
.visible-lg-inline
.visible-lg-inline-block
) are gone. - They have been replaced by
.hidden-xs-up
.hidden-xs-down
.hidden-sm-up
.hidden-sm-down
.hidden-md-up
.hidden-md-down
.hidden-lg-up
.hidden-lg-down
. - The
.hidden-*-up
classes hide the element when the viewport is at the given breakpoint or larger (e.g..hidden-md-up
hides an element on medium, large, and extra-large devices). - The
.hidden-*-down
classes hide the element when the viewport is at the given breakpoint or smaller (e.g..hidden-md-down
hides an element on extra-small, small, and medium devices).
Rather than using explicit .visible-*
classes, you make an element visible by simply not hiding it at that screen size. You can combine one .hidden-*-up
class with one .hidden-*-down
class to show an element only on a given interval of screen sizes (e.g. .hidden-sm-down.hidden-xl-up
shows the element only on medium and large devices).
Note that the changes to the grid breakpoints in v4 means that you'll need to go one breakpoint larger to achieve the same results (e.g. .hidden-md
is more similar to .hidden-lg-down
than to .hidden-md-down
). The new responsive utility classes don't attempt to accommodate less common cases where an element's visibility can't be expressed as a single contiguous range of viewport sizes; you will instead need to use custom CSS in such cases.
Misc notes to prioritize
- Removed the
min--moz-device-pixel-ratio
typo hack for retina media queries - Dropped
.hidden
and.show
because it interferes with jQuery's$(...).hide()
. - Change buttons'
[disabled]
to:disabled
as IE9+ supports:disabled
. Howeverfieldset[disabled]
is still necessary because native disabled fieldsets are still buggy in IE11.
TODO: audit list of stuff in v3 that was marked as deprecated
Additional notes
- Removed support for styled nested tables (for now)