Bootstrap utilities are generated with our utility API and can be used to modify or extend our default set of utility classes via Sass. Our utility API is based on a series of Sass maps and functions for generating families of classes with various options. If you're unfamiliar with Sass maps, read up on the official Sass docs to get started.
The $utilities
map contains all our utilities and is later merged with your
custom $utilities
map, if present. The utility map contains a keyed list of
utility groups which accept the following options:
{ { < bs-table "table table-utilities" }}
| Option | Type | Default value | Description |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| property
| Required | – | Name of the property, this can be
a string or an array of strings (e.g., horizontal paddings or margins). |
| values
| Required | – | List of values, or a map if you don't
want the class name to be the same as the value. If null
is used as map key,
class
is not prepended to the class name. |
| class
| Optional | null | Name of the generated class. If not
provided and property
is an array of strings, class
will default to the
first element of the property
array. If not provided and property
is a
string, the values
keys are used for the class
names. |
| css-var
| Optional | false
| Boolean to
generate CSS variables instead of CSS rules. |
| css-variable-name
| Optional | null | Custom
un-prefixed name for the CSS variable inside the ruleset. |
| local-vars
| Optional | null | Map of local CSS
variables to generate in addition to the CSS rules. |
| state
| Optional | null | List of pseudo-class variants (e.g.,
:hover
or :focus
) to generate. |
| responsive
| Optional | false
| Boolean indicating if
responsive classes should be generated. |
| rfs
| Optional | false
| Boolean to enable fluid rescaling with RFS. |
| print
| Optional | false
| Boolean indicating if print classes
need to be generated. |
| rtl
| Optional | true
| Boolean indicating if utility should be kept in
RTL. |
{ {< /bs-table >} }
API explained#
All utility variables are added to the $utilities
variable within our
_utilities.scss
stylesheet. Each group of utilities looks something like this:
$utilities: (
"opacity": (
property: opacity,
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
)
);
Which outputs the following:
.opacity-0 { opacity: 0; }
.opacity-25 { opacity: .25; }
.opacity-50 { opacity: .5; }
.opacity-75 { opacity: .75; }
.opacity-100 { opacity: 1; }
Property#
The required property
key must be set for any utility, and it must contain a
valid CSS property. This property is used in the generated utility's ruleset.
When the class
key is omitted, it also serves as the default class name.
Consider the text-decoration
utility:
$utilities: (
"text-decoration": (
property: text-decoration,
values: none underline line-through
)
);
Output:
.text-decoration-none { text-decoration: none !important; }
.text-decoration-underline { text-decoration: underline !important; }
.text-decoration-line-through { text-decoration: line-through !important; }
Values#
Use the values
key to specify which values for the specified property
should
be used in the generated class names and rules. Can be a list or map (set in the
utilities or in a Sass variable).
As a list, like with text-decoration
utilities:
values: none underline line-through
As a map, like with opacity
utilities:
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
As a Sass variable that sets the list or map, as in our
position
utilities:
values: $position-values
Class#
Use the class
option to change the class prefix used in the compiled CSS. For
example, to change from .opacity-*
to .o-*
:
$utilities: (
"opacity": (
property: opacity,
class: o,
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
)
);
Output:
.o-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.o-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.o-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.o-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.o-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
If class: null
, generates classes for each of the values
keys:
$utilities: (
"visibility": (
property: visibility,
class: null,
values: (
visible: visible,
invisible: hidden,
)
)
);
Output:
.visible { visibility: visible !important; }
.invisible { visibility: hidden !important; }
CSS variable utilities#
Set the css-var
boolean option to true
and the API will generate local CSS
variables for the given selector instead of the usual property: value
rules.
Add an optional css-variable-name
to set a different CSS variable name than
the class name.
Consider our .text-opacity-*
utilities. If we add the css-variable-name
option, we'll get a custom output.
$utilities: (
"text-opacity": (
css-var: true,
css-variable-name: text-alpha,
class: text-opacity,
values: (
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1
)
),
);
Output:
.text-opacity-25 { --bs-text-alpha: .25; }
.text-opacity-50 { --bs-text-alpha: .5; }
.text-opacity-75 { --bs-text-alpha: .75; }
.text-opacity-100 { --bs-text-alpha: 1; }
Local CSS variables#
Use the local-vars
option to specify a Sass map that will generate local CSS
variables within the utility class's ruleset. Please note that it may require
additional work to consume those local CSS variables in the generated CSS rules.
For example, consider our .bg-*
utilities:
$utilities: (
"background-color": (
property: background-color,
class: bg,
local-vars: (
"bg-opacity": 1
),
values: map-merge(
$utilities-bg-colors,
(
"transparent": transparent
)
)
)
);
Output:
.bg-primary {
--bs-bg-opacity: 1;
background-color: rgba(var(--bs-primary-rgb), var(--bs-bg-opacity)) !important;
}
States#
Use the state
option to generate pseudo-class variations. Example
pseudo-classes are :hover
and :focus
. When a list of states are provided,
classnames are created for that pseudo-class. For example, to change opacity on
hover, add state: hover
and you'll get .opacity-hover:hover
in your compiled
CSS.
Need multiple pseudo-classes? Use a space-separated list of states:
state: hover focus
.
$utilities: (
"opacity": (
property: opacity,
class: opacity,
state: hover,
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
)
);
Output:
.opacity-0-hover:hover { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-25-hover:hover { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-50-hover:hover { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-75-hover:hover { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-100-hover:hover { opacity: 1 !important; }
Responsive#
Add the responsive
boolean to generate responsive utilities (e.g.,
.opacity-md-25
) across all breakpoints.
$utilities: (
"opacity": (
property: opacity,
responsive: true,
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
)
);
Output:
.opacity-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
@media (min-width: 576px) {
.opacity-sm-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-sm-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-sm-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-sm-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-sm-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
@media (min-width: 768px) {
.opacity-md-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-md-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-md-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-md-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-md-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
@media (min-width: 992px) {
.opacity-lg-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-lg-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-lg-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-lg-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-lg-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
@media (min-width: 1200px) {
.opacity-xl-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-xl-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-xl-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-xl-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-xl-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
@media (min-width: 1400px) {
.opacity-xxl-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-xxl-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-xxl-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-xxl-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-xxl-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
Print#
Enabling the print
option will also generate utility classes for print,
which are only applied within the @media print { ... }
media query.
$utilities: (
"opacity": (
property: opacity,
print: true,
values: (
0: 0,
25: .25,
50: .5,
75: .75,
100: 1,
)
)
);
Output:
.opacity-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
@media print {
.opacity-print-0 { opacity: 0 !important; }
.opacity-print-25 { opacity: .25 !important; }
.opacity-print-50 { opacity: .5 !important; }
.opacity-print-75 { opacity: .75 !important; }
.opacity-print-100 { opacity: 1 !important; }
}
Importance#
All utilities generated by the API include !important
to ensure they override
components and modifier classes as intended. You can toggle this setting
globally with the $enable-important-utilities
variable (defaults to true
).
Using the API#
Now that you're familiar with how the utilities API works, learn how to add your own custom classes and modify our default utilities.
Override utilities#
Override existing utilities by using the same key. For example, if you want additional responsive overflow utility classes, you can do this:
$utilities: (
"overflow": (
responsive: true,
property: overflow,
values: visible hidden scroll auto,
),
);
Add utilities#
New utilities can be added to the default $utilities
map with a map-merge
.
Make sure our required Sass files and _utilities.scss
are imported first, then
use the map-merge
to add your additional utilities. For example, here's how to
add a responsive cursor
utility with three values.
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities,
(
"cursor": (
property: cursor,
class: cursor,
responsive: true,
values: auto pointer grab,
)
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
Modify utilities#
Modify existing utilities in the default $utilities
map with map-get
and
map-merge
functions. In the example below, we're adding an additional value to
the width
utilities. Start with an initial map-merge
and then specify which
utility you want to modify. From there, fetch the nested "width"
map with
map-get
to access and modify the utility's options and values.
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities,
(
"width": map-merge(
map-get($utilities, "width"),
(
values: map-merge(
map-get(map-get($utilities, "width"), "values"),
(10: 10%),
),
),
),
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
Enable responsive#
You can enable responsive classes for an existing set of utilities that are not
currently responsive by default. For example, to make the border
classes
responsive:
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities, (
"border": map-merge(
map-get($utilities, "border"),
( responsive: true ),
),
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
This will now generate responsive variations of .border
and .border-0
for
each breakpoint. Your generated CSS will look like this:
.border { ... }
.border-0 { ... }
@media (min-width: 576px) {
.border-sm { ... }
.border-sm-0 { ... }
}
@media (min-width: 768px) {
.border-md { ... }
.border-md-0 { ... }
}
@media (min-width: 992px) {
.border-lg { ... }
.border-lg-0 { ... }
}
@media (min-width: 1200px) {
.border-xl { ... }
.border-xl-0 { ... }
}
@media (min-width: 1400px) {
.border-xxl { ... }
.border-xxl-0 { ... }
}
Rename utilities#
Missing v4 utilities, or used to another naming convention? The utilities API
can be used to override the resulting class
of a given utility—for example, to
rename .ms-*
utilities to oldish .ml-*
:
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities, (
"margin-start": map-merge(
map-get($utilities, "margin-start"),
( class: ml ),
),
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
Remove utilities#
Remove any of the default utilities with the
map-remove()
Sass function.
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
// Remove multiple utilities with a comma-separated list
$utilities: map-remove($utilities, "width", "float");
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
You can also use the
map-merge()
Sass function
and set the group key to null
to remove the utility.
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities,
(
"width": null
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
Add, remove, modify#
You can add, remove, and modify many utilities all at once with the
map-merge()
Sass function.
Here's how you can combine the previous examples into one larger map.
@import "bootstrap/scss/functions";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables";
@import "bootstrap/scss/variables-dark";
@import "bootstrap/scss/maps";
@import "bootstrap/scss/mixins";
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities";
$utilities: map-merge(
$utilities,
(
// Remove the `width` utility
"width": null,
// Make an existing utility responsive
"border": map-merge(
map-get($utilities, "border"),
( responsive: true ),
),
// Add new utilities
"cursor": (
property: cursor,
class: cursor,
responsive: true,
values: auto pointer grab,
)
)
);
@import "bootstrap/scss/utilities/api";
Remove utility in RTL#
Some edge cases
make RTL styling difficult,
such as line breaks in Arabic. Thus utilities can be dropped from RTL output by
setting the rtl
option to false
:
$utilities: (
"word-wrap": (
property: word-wrap word-break,
class: text,
values: (break: break-word),
rtl: false
),
);
Output:
/* rtl:begin:remove */
.text-break {
word-wrap: break-word !important;
word-break: break-word !important;
}
/* rtl:end:remove */
This doesn't output anything in RTL, thanks to the RTLCSS
remove
control directive.