This Bootstrap theme is an easy way to use the new Material Design guidelines by Google in your Bootstrap 3 based application. Just include the theme right after the Bootstrap CSS and include the javascript at the end of your document, everything will be converted to Material Design (paper) style.
This theme is in early development and is not ready for production.
Check out the demo at this link (could be not even with the master branch).
BOWER: bower install bootstrap-material-design --save
GEMS: gem install bootstrap-material-design
We decided to merge the SASS fork in to the main repository instead of having two seperate ones, #40. The default grunt
task will compile the LESS source. To use the SASS base use the SCSS task grunt scss
.
NB The LESS and SASS bases should reflect each other, right now this project is unstable and under heavy development so this might not be true before the first stable release.
Navigate to the dist/
folder in this repository, and you will see the test.html
file, which has the CSS include statements, in the head
section and the JS includes just before body
section closes.
You need to copy the dist/
folder to the root of your project, ensuring that all the files in your project can access the files through the relative URL, supplied in the CSS and the JS includes.
- Morphing icons
- Icons/grids/chips to card/fullscreen transitions
- Headers
- Icon button
- Tabs
- Toggle buttons
I'll try to write every component without the need of Javascript but just CSS, and use JS only if strictly needed. More "todo" things can be found in the ISSUES of this repository.
If you like this project you may support me by donating something on Gittip, starring this repository or reporting bugs and ideas in the issue section.
Please see the contrib file.
Material Design for Bootstrap provides some additional stuff to get the best from Material Design.
There are 17 additional color variations (in addition to the classic 4 variations) for buttons, inputs, checkboxes, radios, alerts, navbars, tabs, labels, paginations, progress bars and more.
They can be used by adding the class suffix -material-color
to the desired element and replacing color
with the desired one.
Example:
<button class="btn btn-material-deeppurple">Deep purple button</button>
These colors are taken from the Material Design color palette and are reported below:
Add .btn-flat
to a button to make it flat, without shadows.
Add .btn-raised
to a button to add a permanent shadow to it.
Add .floating-label
to an input field with a placeholder
to transform the placeholder in a floating label.
Remember to use the proper HTML markup to get radio and checkboxes styled correctly (choose between radio or checkbox):
<div class="radio/checkbox radio-primary">
<label>
<input type="radio/checkbox" checked>
Option one is this
</label>
</div>
Material Design for Bootstrap includes 490 original Material Design icons! These icons are extracted from the original Google sources and are licensed under the BSD license. They are provided as an iconic and easy to use font.
Variations are available for every icon, including the original Bootstrap icons.
The syntax to add a Material icon is:
<i class="icon icon-material-favorite"></i>
Material.js is a jQuery plugin that add some magic to your markup and allows Material Design for Bootstrap to style some elements like inputs, checkboxes, radios etc.
This plugin exposes some functions, them are:
$.material.inits
is a shortcut to run all the following commands.
$.material.ripples()
will apply ripples.js to the default elements.
$.material.input()
will enable the MD style to the text inputs, and other kind of inputs (number, email, file etc).
$.material.checkbox():
will enable the MD style to the checkboxes (remember to follow the markup guidelines explained in the Inputs chapter.
$.material.radio():
will enable the MD style to the checkboxes (remember to follow the markup guidelines explained in the Inputs chapter.
Every function expects an optional value that will be used as selector for the function, for example
$.material.ripples("#selector, #foobar")
will apply Ripples.js only to #selector
and #foobar
.
The functions that allows an optional selector are $.material.ripples
, $.material.input
, $.material.checkbox
and $.material.radio
.
You can even override the default values using the $.material.options
function, the default values are:
$.material.options = {
"withRipples": ".btn:not(.btn-link), .card-image, .navbar a:not(.withoutripple), .nav-tabs a:not(.withoutripple), .withripple",
"inputElements": "input.form-control, textarea.form-control, select.form-control",
"checkboxElements": ".checkbox > label > input[type=checkbox]",
"radioElements": ".radio > label > input[type=radio]"
}
If you need to dynamically add elements to your DOM then you may need to include Arrive.js before Material.js, this will automatically apply Material.js to every new element added by you using JS.
Material Design for Bootstrap comes with styling support for various external scripts:
Create snackbars and toasts with SnackbarJS plugin. The default toast style is the squared one (snackbar style). If you like to use the rounded style (toast style), please add the toast
class to the style
option of SnackbarJS.
This is part of Material Design for Bootstrap project and is a plain Javascript script which creates the ripple effect on click of the defined elements. At the moment RipplesJS does not have its own repository but it will probably have one in the future.
Make cross-browser sliders and get them styled with Material Design thanks to the support provided by this theme. Read more about noUiSlider here
Transform select and multi select inputs in advanced text inputs. Material Design for BS provides a fulle replacement of the plugin's CSS, don't include it so. Read more about selectize.js
Currently Material Design for Bootstrap supports Google Chrome (tested v37+), Mozilla Firefox (tested 30+), and Internet Explorer (tested 11+). Mobile browsers are not currently tested but it may work.