<p>The default grid system provided as part of Bootstrap is a <strong>940px-wide, 12-column grid</strong>.</p>
<p>It also has three responsive variations for various devices and resolutions: phone, tablet, and large widescreen desktops.</p>
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<p>As shown here, a basic layout can be created with two "columns," each spanning a number of the 12 foundational columns we defined as part of our grid system.</p>
<p>With the static (non-fluid) grid system in Bootstrap, nesting is easy. To nest your content, just add a new <code>.row</code> and set of <code>.span*</code> columns within an existing <code>.span*</code> column.</p>
<p>Built into Bootstrap are a handful of variables for customizing the default 940px grid system, documented above. All variables for the grid are stored in variables.less.</p>
<p>Modifying the grid means changing the three <code>@grid*</code> variables and recompiling Bootstrap. Change the grid variables in variables.less and use one of the <ahref="#compiling">four ways documented to recompile</a>. If you're adding more columns, be sure to add the CSS for those in grid.less.</p>
<p>Customization of the grid only works at the default level, the 940px grid. To maintain the responsive aspects of Bootstrap, you'll also have to customize the grids in responsive.less.</p>
<p>The default and simple 940px-wide, centered layout for just about any website or page provided by a single <code><div class="container"></code>.</p>
<p><code><div class="fluid-container"></code> gives flexible page structure, min- and max-widths, and a left-hand sidebar. It's great for apps and docs.</p>
<p>Bootstrap supports a handful of media queries to help make your projects more appropriate on different devices and screen resolutions. Here's what's included:</p>
<tdclass="muted"colspan="2">Fluid columns, no fixed widths</td>
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<td>Portrait tablets</td>
<td>480px to 768px</td>
<tdclass="muted"colspan="2">Fluid columns, no fixed widths</td>
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<td>Landscape tablets</td>
<td>768px to 940px</td>
<td>44px</td>
<td>20px</td>
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<td>Default</td>
<td>940px and up</td>
<td>60px</td>
<td>20px</td>
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<td>Large display</td>
<td>1210px and up</td>
<td>70px</td>
<td>30px</td>
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<h3>What they do</h3>
<p>Media queries allow for custom CSS based on a number of conditions—ratios, widths, display type, etc—but usually focuses around <code>min-width</code> and <code>max-width</code>.</p>
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<li>Modify the width of column in our grid</li>
<li>Stack elements instead of float wherever necessary</li>
<li>Resize headings and text to be more appropriate for devices</li>
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<h2>Using the media queries</h2>
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<p>Bootstrap doesn't automatically include these media queries, but understanding and adding them is very easy and requires minimal setup. You have a few options for including the responsive features of Bootstrap:</p>
<p><strong>Why not just include it?</strong> Truth be told, not everything needs to be responsive. Instead of encouraging developers to remove this feature, we figure it best to enable it.</p>
<p>Designed and built with all the love in the world <ahref="http://twitter.com/twitter"target="_blank">@twitter</a> by <ahref="http://twitter.com/mdo"target="_blank">@mdo</a> and <ahref="http://twitter.com/fat"target="_blank">@fat</a>.</p>
<p>Code licensed under the <ahref="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0"target="_blank">Apache License v2.0</a>. Documentation licensed under <ahref="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">CC BY 3.0</a>.</p>
<p>Icons from <ahref="http://glyphicons.com">Glyphicons Free</a>, licensed under <ahref="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">CC BY 3.0</a>.</p>