Navbar
A responsive horizontal navbar that can supports images, links, buttons, and dropdowns
{%
include meta.html
new=true
since="0.4.3"
colors=true
sizes=false
variables=true
%}
The new navbar
replaces the deprecated nav
component, whose documentation you can still access temporarily here.
The navbar
component is a responsive and versatile horizontal navigation bar with the following structure:
-
navbar
the main container
-
navbar-brand
the left side, always visible, which usually contains the logo and optionally some links or icons
-
navbar-burger
the hamburger icon, which toggles the navbar menu on touch devices
-
navbar-menu
the right side, hidden on touch devices, visible on desktop
-
navbar-start
the left part of the menu, which appears next to the navbar brand on desktop
-
navbar-end
the right part of the menu, which appears at the end of the navbar
-
navbar-item
each single item of the navbar, which can either be an a
or a div
-
navbar-link
a link as the sibling of a dropdown, with an arrow
-
navbar-dropdown
the dropdown menu, which can include navbar items and dividers
-
navbar-divider
a horizontal line to separate navbar items
{% include anchor.html name="Navbar brand" %}
The navbar-brand
is the left side of the navbar. It can contain:
-
a number of
navbar-item
-
the
navbar-burger
as last child
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_brand_example}}{% endhighlight %}
The navbar brand is always visible: on both touch devices {% include bp/touch.html %} and desktop {% include bp/desktop.html %}. As a result, it is recommended to only use a few navbar items to avoid overflowing horizontally on small devices.
{{navbar_brand_items_example}}
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_brand_items_example}}{% endhighlight %}
On desktop {% include bp/desktop.html %}, the navbar brand will only take up the space it needs.
{% include anchor.html name="Navbar burger" %}
The navbar-burger
is a hamburger menu that only appears on mobile. It has to appear as the last child of navbar-brand
.
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_burger_example }}{% endhighlight %}
You can add the modifier class is-active
to turn it into a cross.
{% include anchor.html name="Navbar menu" %}
The navbar-menu
is the counterpart of the navbar brand. As such, it must appear as a direct child of navbar
, as a sibling of navbar-brand
.
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_menu_example}}{% endhighlight %}
The navbar-menu
is hidden on touch devices {% include bp/touch.html %}. You need to add the modifier class is-active
to display it.
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_menu_active_example}}{% endhighlight %}
On desktop {% include bp/desktop.html %}, the navbar-menu
will fill up the space available in the navbar, leaving the navbar brand just the space it needs. It needs, however, two elements as direct children:
The Bulma package does not come with any JavaScript.
Here is however an implementation example, which toggles the class is-active
on both the navbar-burger
and the targeted navbar-menu
.
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_js_html }}{% endhighlight %}
{% highlight javascript %}{{ navbar_js_code }}{% endhighlight %}
{% include anchor.html name="Navbar start and navbar end" %}
The navbar-start
and navbar-end
are the two direct and only children of the navbar-menu
.
On desktop {% include bp/desktop.html %}:
-
navbar-start
will appear on the left
-
navbar-end
will appear on the right
Each of them can contain any number of navbar-item
.
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_start_end_example}}{% endhighlight %}
{% include anchor.html name="Navbar item" %}
A navbar-item
is a repeatable element that can be:
-
a navigation link
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_item_link_example }}{% endhighlight %}
-
a container for the brand logo
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_item_brand_example }}{% endhighlight %}
-
the parent of a dropdown menu
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_item_dropdown_example }}{% endhighlight %}
-
a child of a navbar dropdown
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_item_dropdown_bis_example }}{% endhighlight %}
-
a container for almost anything you want, like a
field
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_item_other_example }}{% endhighlight %}
It can either be an anchor tag <a>
or a <div>
, as a direct child of either:
-
navbar
-
navbar-brand
-
navbar-start
-
navbar-end
-
navbar-dropdown
{% include anchor.html name="Transparent navbar" %}
To seamlessly integrate the navbar in any visual context, you can add the is-transparent
modifer on the navbar
component. This will remove any hover or active background from the navbar items.
{{navbar_transparent_example}}
{% highlight html %}{{navbar_transparent_example}}{% endhighlight %}
{% include anchor.html name="Dropdown menu" %}
To create a dropdown menu, you will need 4 elements:
-
navbar-item
with the has-dropdown
modifier
-
navbar-link
which contains the dropdown arrow
-
navbar-dropdown
which can contain instances of navbar-item
and navbar-divider
{{ navbar_dropdown_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_example }}{% endhighlight %}
Show/hide the dropdown with either CSS or JavaScript
The navbar-dropdown
is visible on touch devices {% include bp/touch.html %} but hidden on desktop {% include bp/desktop.html %}. How the dropdown is displayed on desktop depends on the parent's class.
The navbar-item
with the has-dropdown
modifier, has 2 additional modifiers
-
is-hoverable
: the dropdown will show up when hovering the parent navbar-item
-
is-active
: the dropdown will show up all the time
While the CSS :hover
implementation works perfectly, the is-active
class is available for users who want to control the display of the dropdown with JavaScript.
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_hover_snippet }}{% endhighlight %}
{{ navbar_dropdown_hover_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_hover_example }}{% endhighlight %}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_active_snippet }}{% endhighlight %}
{{ navbar_dropdown_active_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_active_example }}{% endhighlight %}
Right dropdown
0.5.1
If your parent navbar-item
is on the right side, you can position the dropdown to start from the right with the is-right
modifier.
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_right_snippet }}{% endhighlight %}
{{ navbar_dropdown_right_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_right_example }}{% endhighlight %}
Styles for the dropdown menu
By default, the navbar-dropdown
has:
-
a grey
border-top
-
a
border-radius
at both bottom corners
{{ navbar_dropdown_default_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_default_example }}{% endhighlight %}
When having a transparent navbar, it is preferable to use the boxed version of the dropdown, by using the is-boxed
modifier.
-
the grey border is removed
-
a slight inner shadow is added
-
all corners are rounded
-
the hover/active state is animated
{{ navbar_dropdown_boxed_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_boxed_example }}{% endhighlight %}
Active dropdown navbar item
{{ navbar_dropdown_item_active_example }}
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_dropdown_item_active_example }}{% endhighlight %}
Dropdown divider
You can add a navbar-divider
to display a horizontal rule in a navbar-dropdown
.
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_divider_example }}{% endhighlight %}
{% include anchor.html name="Colors" %}
New!
0.5.2
You can change the background color of the navbar
by using one of the 9 color modifiers:
is-primary
is-info
is-success
is-warning
is-danger
is-black
is-dark
is-light
is-white
{% highlight html %}{{ navbar_color_markup }}{% endhighlight %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="primary" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="info" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="success" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="warning" light=true %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="danger" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="black" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="dark" %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="light" light=true %}
{% include examples/navbar-color.html color="white" light=true %}
{% include variables.html %}