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Twitter Bootstrap

Bootstrap
Boostrap logo.svg
Original author(s) Mark Otto, Jacob Thornton
Developer(s) Bootstrap Core Team
Initial release August 19, 2011; 6 years ago (2011-08-19)
Stable release
3.3.7 / July 25, 2016; 14 months ago (2016-07-25)
Preview release
4.0.0-beta / August 10, 2017; 54 days ago (2017-08-10)
Repository github.com/twbs/bootstrap
Development status Active
Written in HTML, CSS, Less (v3), Sass (v4) and JavaScript
Platform Web engines
License MIT License (Apache License 2.0 prior to 3.1.0)
Website getbootstrap.com

Bootstrap is a free and open-source front-end web framework for designing websites and web applications. It contains HTML- and CSS-based design templates for typography, forms, buttons, navigation and other interface components, as well as optional JavaScript extensions. Unlike many web frameworks, it concerns itself with front-end development only.

Bootstrap is the second most-starred project on GitHub, with more than 111,600 stars and 51,500 forks.

Bootstrap, originally named Twitter Blueprint, was developed by Mark Otto and Jacob Thornton at Twitter as a framework to encourage consistency across internal tools. Before Bootstrap, various libraries were used for interface development, which led to inconsistencies and a high maintenance burden. According to Twitter developer Mark Otto:

"A super small group of developers and I got together to design and build a new internal tool and saw an opportunity to do something more. Through that process, we saw ourselves build something much more substantial than another internal tool. Months later, we ended up with an early version of Bootstrap as a way to document and share common design patterns and assets within the company."

After a few months of development by a small group, many developers at Twitter began to contribute to the project as a part of Hack Week, a hackathon-style week for the Twitter development team. It was renamed from Twitter Blueprint to Bootstrap, and released as an open source project on August 19, 2011. It has continued to be maintained by Mark Otto, Jacob Thornton, and a small group of core developers, as well as a large community of contributors.

On January 31, 2012, Bootstrap 2 was released, which added a twelve-column responsive grid layout system, inbuilt support for Glyphicons, several new components, as well as changes to many of the existing components.

On August 19, 2013, Bootstrap 3 was released, which redesigned components to use flat design, and a mobile first approach.


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