Plugins can be included individually (using Bootstrap’s individual
js/dist/*.js
), or all at once using
bootstrap.js
or the minified
bootstrap.min.js
(don’t include both).
If you use a bundler (Webpack, Parcel, Vite…), you can use
/js/dist/*.js
files which are UMD ready.
While the Bootstrap CSS can be used with any framework, the Bootstrap JavaScript is not fully compatible with JavaScript frameworks like React, Vue, and Angular which assume full knowledge of the DOM. Both Bootstrap and the framework may attempt to mutate the same DOM element, resulting in bugs like dropdowns that are stuck in the “open” position.
A better alternative for those using this type of frameworks is to use a framework-specific package instead of the Bootstrap JavaScript. Here are some of the most popular options:
We provide a version of Bootstrap built as
ESM
(
bootstrap.esm.js
and
bootstrap.esm.min.js
) which allows you to use Bootstrap as a module in the browser, if your
targeted browsers support it
.
<script type="module">
import { Toast } from 'bootstrap.esm.min.js'
Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('.toast'))
.forEach(toastNode => new Toast(toastNode))
</script>
Compared to JS bundlers, using ESM in the browser requires you to use the full path and filename instead of the module name.
Read more about JS modules in the browser.
That’s why we use
'bootstrap.esm.min.js'
instead of
'bootstrap'
above. However, this is further complicated by our Popper dependency, which imports Popper into our JavaScript like so:
import * as Popper from "@popperjs/core"
If you try this as-is, you’ll see an error in the console like the following:
Uncaught TypeError: Failed to resolve module specifier "@popperjs/core". Relative references must start with either "/", "./", or "../".
To fix this, you can use an
importmap
to resolve the arbitrary module names to complete paths. If your
targeted browsers
do not support
importmap
, you’ll need to use the
es-module-shims
project. Here’s how it works for Bootstrap and Popper:
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" integrity="sha384-rbsA2VBKQhggwzxH7pPCaAqO46MgnOM80zW1RWuH61DGLwZJEdK2Kadq2F9CUG65" crossorigin="anonymous">
<title>Hello, modularity!</title>
</head>
<h1>Hello, modularity!</h1>
<button id="popoverButton" type="button" class="btn btn-primary btn-lg" class="btn btn-lg btn-danger" data-bs-toggle="popover" title="ESM in Browser" data-bs-content="Bang!">Custom popover</button>
<script async src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/es-module-shims@1/dist/es-module-shims.min.js" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script type="importmap">
"imports": {
"@popperjs/core": "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@popperjs/[email protected]/dist/umd/popper.min.js",
"bootstrap": "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/js/bootstrap.esm.min.js"
</script>
<script type="module">
import * as bootstrap from 'bootstrap'
new bootstrap.Popover(document.getElementById('popoverButton'))
</script>
</body>
</html>
Some plugins and CSS components depend on other plugins. If you include plugins individually, make sure to check for these dependencies in the docs.
Our dropdowns, popovers, and tooltips also depend on Popper .
Nearly all Bootstrap plugins can be enabled and configured through HTML alone with data attributes (our preferred way of using JavaScript functionality). Be sure to only use one set of data attributes on a single element (e.g., you cannot trigger a tooltip and modal from the same button.)
As options can be passed via data attributes or JavaScript, you can append an option name to
data-bs-
, as in
data-bs-animation="{value}"
. Make sure to change the case type of the option name from “
camelCase
” to “
kebab-case
” when passing the options via data attributes. For example, use
data-bs-custom-class="beautifier"
instead of
data-bs-customClass="beautifier"
.
As of Bootstrap 5.2.0, all components support an
experimental
reserved data attribute
data-bs-config
that can house simple component configuration as a JSON string. When an element has
data-bs-config='{"delay":0, "title":123}'
and
data-bs-title="456"
attributes, the final
title
value will be
456
and the separate data attributes will override values given on
data-bs-config
. In addition, existing data attributes are able to house JSON values like
data-bs-delay='{"show":0,"hide":150}'
.
We use the native
querySelector
and
querySelectorAll
methods to query DOM elements for performance reasons, so you must use
valid selectors
. If you use special selectors like
collapse:Example
, be sure to escape them.
Bootstrap provides custom events for most plugins’ unique actions. Generally, these come in an infinitive and past participle form - where the infinitive (ex.
show
) is triggered at the start of an event, and its past participle form (ex.
shown
) is triggered on the completion of an action.
All infinitive events provide
preventDefault()
functionality. This provides the ability to stop the execution of an action before it starts. Returning false from an event handler will also automatically call
preventDefault()
.
const myModal = document.querySelector('#myModal')
myModal.addEventListener('show.bs.modal', event => {
if (!data) {
return event.preventDefault() // stops modal from being shown
All constructors accept an optional options object or nothing (which initiates a plugin with its default behavior):
const myModalEl = document.querySelector('#myModal')
const modal = new bootstrap.Modal(myModalEl) // initialized with defaults
const configObject = { keyboard: false }
const modal1 = new bootstrap.Modal(myModalEl, configObject) // initialized with no keyboard
If you’d like to get a particular plugin instance, each plugin exposes a
getInstance
method. For example, to retrieve an instance directly from an element:
bootstrap.Popover.getInstance(myPopoverEl)
This method will return
null
if an instance is not initiated over the requested element.
Alternatively,
getOrCreateInstance
can be used to get the instance associated with a DOM element, or create a new one in case it wasn’t initialized.
bootstrap.Popover.getOrCreateInstance(myPopoverEl, configObject)
In case an instance wasn’t initialized, it may accept and use an optional configuration object as second argument.
In addition to the
getInstance
and
getOrCreateInstance
methods, all plugin constructors can accept a DOM element or a valid
CSS selector
as the first argument. Plugin elements are found with the
querySelector
method since our plugins only support a single element.
const modal = new bootstrap.Modal('#myModal')
const dropdown = new bootstrap.Dropdown('[data-bs-toggle="dropdown"]')
const offcanvas = bootstrap.Offcanvas.getInstance('#myOffcanvas')
const alert = bootstrap.Alert.getOrCreateInstance('#myAlert')
All programmatic API methods are asynchronous and return to the caller once the transition is started, but before it ends . In order to execute an action once the transition is complete, you can listen to the corresponding event.
const myCollapseEl = document.querySelector('#myCollapse')
myCollapseEl.addEventListener('shown.bs.collapse', event => {
// Action to execute once the collapsible area is expanded
In addition, a method call on a transitioning component will be ignored .
const myCarouselEl = document.querySelector('#myCarousel')
const carousel = bootstrap.Carousel.getInstance(myCarouselEl) // Retrieve a Carousel instance
myCarouselEl.addEventListener('slid.bs.carousel', event => {
carousel.to('2') // Will slide to the slide 2 as soon as the transition to slide 1 is finished
carousel.to('1') // Will start sliding to the slide 1 and returns to the caller
carousel.to('2') // !! Will be ignored, as the transition to the slide 1 is not finished !!
dispose
method
While it may seem correct to use the
dispose
method immediately after
hide()
, it will lead to incorrect results. Here’s an example of the problem use:
const myModal = document.querySelector('#myModal')
myModal.hide() // it is asynchronous
myModal.addEventListener('shown.bs.hidden', event => {
myModal.dispose()
You can change the default settings for a plugin by modifying the plugin’s
Constructor.Default
object:
// changes default for the modal plugin's `keyboard` option to false
bootstrap.Modal.Default.keyboard = false
Every Bootstrap plugin exposes the following methods and static properties.
Method Description
getInstance
Static
method which allows you to get the modal instance associated with a DOM element.
getOrCreateInstance
Static
method which allows you to get the modal instance associated with a DOM element, or create a new one in case it wasn’t initialized.
Tooltips and Popovers use our built-in sanitizer to sanitize options which accept HTML.
The default
allowList
value is the following:
const ARIA_ATTRIBUTE_PATTERN = /^aria-[\w-]*$/i
const DefaultAllowlist = {
// Global attributes allowed on any supplied element below.
'*': ['class', 'dir', 'id', 'lang', 'role', ARIA_ATTRIBUTE_PATTERN],
a: ['target', 'href', 'title', 'rel'],
area: [],
b: [],
br: [],
col: [],
code: [],
div: [],
em: [],
hr: [],
h1: [],
h2: [],
h3: [],
h4: [],
h5: [],
h6: [],
i: [],
img: ['src', 'srcset', 'alt', 'title', 'width', 'height'],
li: [],
ol: [],
p: [],
pre: [],
s: [],
small: [],
span: [],
sub: [],
sup: [],
strong: [],
u: [],
ul: []
If you want to add new values to this default
allowList
you can do the following:
const myDefaultAllowList = bootstrap.Tooltip.Default.allowList
// To allow table elements
myDefaultAllowList.table = []
// To allow td elements and data-bs-option attributes on td elements
myDefaultAllowList.td = ['data-bs-option']
// You can push your custom regex to validate your attributes.
// Be careful about your regular expressions being too lax
const myCustomRegex = /^data-my-app-[\w-]+/
myDefaultAllowList['*'].push(myCustomRegex)
If you want to bypass our sanitizer because you prefer to use a dedicated library, for example DOMPurify , you should do the following:
const yourTooltipEl = document.querySelector('#yourTooltip')
const tooltip = new bootstrap.Tooltip(yourTooltipEl, {
sanitizeFn(content) {
return DOMPurify.sanitize(content)
You don’t need jQuery in Bootstrap 5
, but it’s still possible to use our components with jQuery. If Bootstrap detects
jQuery
in the
window
object, it’ll add all of our components in jQuery’s plugin system. This allows you to do the following:
$('[data-bs-toggle="tooltip"]').tooltip() // to enable tooltips, with default configuration
$('[data-bs-toggle="tooltip"]').tooltip({ boundary: 'clippingParents', customClass: 'myClass' }) // to initialize tooltips with given configuration
$('#myTooltip').tooltip('show') // to trigger `show` method
The same goes for our other components.
Sometimes it is necessary to use Bootstrap plugins with other UI frameworks. In these circumstances, namespace collisions can occasionally occur. If this happens, you may call
.noConflict
on the plugin you wish to revert the value of.
const bootstrapButton = $.fn.button.noConflict() // return $.fn.button to previously assigned value
$.fn.bootstrapBtn = bootstrapButton // give $().bootstrapBtn the Bootstrap functionality
Bootstrap does not officially support third-party JavaScript libraries like Prototype or jQuery UI. Despite
.noConflict
and namespaced events, there may be compatibility problems that you need to fix on your own.
Bootstrap will detect jQuery if
jQuery
is present in the
window
object and there is no
data-bs-no-jquery
attribute set on
<body>
. If jQuery is found, Bootstrap will emit events thanks to jQuery’s event system. So if you want to listen to Bootstrap’s events, you’ll have to use the jQuery methods (
.on
,
.one
) instead of
addEventListener
.
$('#myTab a').on('shown.bs.tab', () => {
// do something...
Bootstrap’s plugins have no special fallback when JavaScript is disabled. If you care about the user experience in this case, use
<noscript>
to explain the situation (and how to re-enable JavaScript) to your users, and/or add your own custom fallbacks.