12

Bootstrap is designed for everyone, everywhere. Bootstrap makes front-end web development faster and easier. It's made for folks of all skill levels, devices of all shapes, and projects of all sizes.

Preprocessors in bootstrap in addition to vanilla CSS, includes support for the two most popular CSS preprocessors, Less and Sass.

One framework covers every device. In bootstrap one can easily and efficiently scales your project with one code base, from phones to tablets to desktops.

For Developers the frame work offers comprehensive docs so it has allowed our team to get extensive and beautiful documentation with hundreds of live examples, code snippets, and more.

However for me the biggest advantage of Bootstrap is the fact that it is open source. It's hosted, developed, and maintained on GitHub.

Bootstrap 3 is not backwards compatible with v2.x. Therefore our developers dont upgrading from v2.x to v3.0. and instead they build a clean new template based on Bootstrap 3 and apply it to the DNN framework website.  For a broader overview, see what's new in the v3.0 release announcement.

Two years after the first release Bootstrap released version 3.0. It's been a crazy long ride for the community. Thanks to everyone in Bootstrap community that tested the RCs (er, betas), reported bugs, and contributed code. We would not have been able to reach here without the community help.

What's new

  • For those who haven't been following along too closely, here's a recap of all the biggest changes shipping with Bootstrap 3:
  • New design and an optional theme! With v3, we've gone flat. Don't call it a trend—it's all about customization, folks. Since we simplified the aesthetics though, we thought it'd help to have an optional theme. To use it, check out the Bootstrap theme example.
  • Mobile first and always responsive! Nearly everything has been redesigned and rebuilt to start from your handheld devices and scale up.
  • Brand new Customizer! It's been redesigned, is now compiled in the browser instead of Heroku, has better dependency support, and even has built-in error handling. Better yet, we now save your customizations to an anonymous Gist for easy reuse, sharing, and modifications. 
  • Better box model by default. Everything in Bootstrap gets box-sizing: border-box, making for easier sizing options and an enhanced grid system.
  • Super-powered grid system. With four tiers of grid classes—phones, tablets, desktops, and large desktops—you can do some super crazy awesome layouts.
  • Rewritten JavaScript plugins. All events are now namespaced, no-conflict stuff works way better, and more.
  • New Glyphicons icon font! While they were gone for a while, we've since restored the Glyphicons to the main repo. In 2.x, they were images, but now they're in font format and include 40 new glyphs.
  • Overhauled navbar. It's now always responsive and comes with some super handy and re-arrangable subcomponents.
  • Modals are way more responsive. We've overhauled the modal code to make it way more responsive on mobile devices. They now scroll the entire viewport instead of having a max-height.
  • Added some components! New to the mix are panels and list groups.
  • Removed some components! We've dropped the accordion (replaced with collapsible panels), submenus, typeahead, and a few more small items. (Worth celebrating as much as adding new ones.)
  • More consistent base and sizing classes. Buttons, tables, forms, alerts, and more have been updated to have more consistent classes for easier customizer and extensibility.
  • Docs have been blown up, yo. We've added a lot of new documentation, not only for our components, but for browser support (including gotchas and bugs), license FAQs, third party support (and workarounds), accessibility, and more.
  • Dropped Internet Explorer 7 and Firefox 3.6 support. For Internet Explorer 8, you'll need to include Respond.js for all the media queries to work correctly. You can read more about browser support in the docs.
  • For our pre-release testers and others who have been following along with the RCs, here's a list of some of the more prominent changes made since RC2:
  • Hella bugs have been fixed (duh, right?).
  • Restored the Glyphicons icon font.
  • Navbars now require a .navbar-default for the standard version.
  • Panels now require a .panel-default for the standard gray variation.
  • Alerts now require a modifier class (e.g., .alert.alert-warning for the previously default yellow alert).
  • Multiple responsive utilities can now be applied to the same element.
  • Examples are back in the main repo and have been fully updated.
  • Docs have been updated for more consistent placement, naming, etc.
  • Customizer compiling bugs have all been fixed.
  • The optional theme has been added and is demonstrated in an example.
  • Jumbotrons are now made to extend the full width of the viewport with a container inside, but if you reverse that, the jumbotron in a container will be rounded and padded.
  • The navbar components have been updated to better account for the presence of containers and more. You'll see some new margin and padding changes, but no markup changes should be required.
Actions: E-mail | Permalink |
CONTACT US!
section6_map
section5_line

Head Office: Woking, UK

Development Office: Pondicherry

 
 
section6_msg
section5_line

Email :

Click here

 
 
Enter Your Name
Enter Your Mail Id
Enter Your Subjects
Enter Your Message