Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Fix heading levels in grid example #26433

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
May 1, 2018
Merged
Changes from all commits
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
16 changes: 8 additions & 8 deletions docs/4.1/examples/grid/index.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
<h1>Bootstrap grid examples</h1>
<p class="lead">Basic grid layouts to get you familiar with building within the Bootstrap grid system.</p>

<h3>Five grid tiers</h3>
<h2>Five grid tiers</h2>
<p>There are five tiers to the Bootstrap grid system, one for each range of devices we support. Each tier starts at a minimum viewport size and automatically applies to the larger devices unless overridden.</p>

<div class="row">
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -55,35 +55,35 @@ <h3>Five grid tiers</h3>
<div class="col-xl-4">.col-xl-4</div>
</div>

<h3>Three equal columns</h3>
<h2>Three equal columns</h2>
<p>Get three equal-width columns <strong>starting at desktops and scaling to large desktops</strong>. On mobile devices, tablets and below, the columns will automatically stack.</p>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-4">.col-md-4</div>
<div class="col-md-4">.col-md-4</div>
<div class="col-md-4">.col-md-4</div>
</div>

<h3>Three unequal columns</h3>
<h2>Three unequal columns</h2>
<p>Get three columns <strong>starting at desktops and scaling to large desktops</strong> of various widths. Remember, grid columns should add up to twelve for a single horizontal block. More than that, and columns start stacking no matter the viewport.</p>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3">.col-md-3</div>
<div class="col-md-6">.col-md-6</div>
<div class="col-md-3">.col-md-3</div>
</div>

<h3>Two columns</h3>
<h2>Two columns</h2>
<p>Get two columns <strong>starting at desktops and scaling to large desktops</strong>.</p>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-8">.col-md-8</div>
<div class="col-md-4">.col-md-4</div>
</div>

<h3>Full width, single column</h3>
<h2>Full width, single column</h2>
<p class="text-warning">No grid classes are necessary for full-width elements.</p>

<hr>

<h3>Two columns with two nested columns</h3>
<h2>Two columns with two nested columns</h2>
<p>Per the documentation, nesting is easy—just put a row of columns within an existing column. This gives you two columns <strong>starting at desktops and scaling to large desktops</strong>, with another two (equal widths) within the larger column.</p>
<p>At mobile device sizes, tablets and down, these columns and their nested columns will stack.</p>
<div class="row">
Expand All @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ <h3>Two columns with two nested columns</h3>

<hr>

<h3>Mixed: mobile and desktop</h3>
<h2>Mixed: mobile and desktop</h2>
<p>The Bootstrap v4 grid system has five tiers of classes: xs (extra small), sm (small), md (medium), lg (large), and xl (extra large). You can use nearly any combination of these classes to create more dynamic and flexible layouts.</p>
<p>Each tier of classes scales up, meaning if you plan on setting the same widths for xs and sm, you only need to specify xs.</p>
<div class="row">
Expand All @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ <h3>Mixed: mobile and desktop</h3>

<hr>

<h3>Mixed: mobile, tablet, and desktop</h3>
<h2>Mixed: mobile, tablet, and desktop</h2>
<p></p>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12 col-sm-6 col-lg-8">.col-12 .col-sm-6 .col-lg-8</div>
Expand Down