Welcome to the world's most popular framework; before bootstrap, you always used HTML to create the layout and CSS and CSS3 to create an attractive website, but when you work on custom coding, that means only using HTML and CSS to design your website, but what happens when you want to create a mobile-ready website? A great deal of effort goes into creating even a single web page. Without having to write additional code, bootstrap enables you to create a mobile-first website; indeed, bootstrap comes pre-loaded with thousands of classes. You're constantly concentrating on web pages rather than coding. This series is intended for both beginners and advanced students; we begin at the beginning. How do you define bootstrap? What is the best way to begin using bootstrap? We'll cover the bootstrap components, the JS section, and everything else related to the bootstrap framework, most notably the grid system.
We begin with the bootstrap 3 version, progress to the bootstrap 4 version, and finally to the bootstrap 5 version, which will be the bootstrap family's latest release in 2021.
You'll learn how to create a mobile-first website/web page by utilizing a grid system; I'll walk you through the process of managing your rows, columns, containers, and so on. Once you've mastered the fundamentals of Bootstrap, we'll dive into projects to help you grasp the big picture of the framework.
I will also give you some other front-end framework introductions; you will learn many things in this series.
Topics included
All things from the Components section
All staff from the CSS section
All stuff from the JS section
Media Queries.
Bootstrap 4.
Five projects
Tips and tricks
If you want to learn bootstrap quickly, you are in the right place.