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bootstrap-Theme

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Twitter Bootstrap Theme

This page aims to bring together discussions from the themes forum related to the development of a moodle 'base' theme that conforms to the Twitter Bootstrap coding conventions. There has already been a great deal of work done by individuals within the Moodle community and it's hoped that by formulating this work we may be able to collaborate and build on this.


Technical Approach

There are 5 major categories of development for this theme family:

  • Layouts
  • Renderers
  • Stylesheets
  • Javascripts
  • Settings (child themes)

Layout

The General layout will be a 2 column layout based on the "Fluid" example providing an "out of the box" responsive grid.

Renderers

Multiple renderers will be developed to make Moodle output more bootstrap friendly by 1) outputting classes defined in bootstrap.css and 2) outputting semantic HTML exemplified in the bootstrap documentation

Stylesheets

Bootstrap.css will be the core CSS sheet with adjustments made to reduce re-duplication (like 'reset') and to define Moodle core classes that can't be matched to bootstrap via a renderer

Javascripts

YUI Bootstrap plugins will be dropped in to the theme in place of the jQuery version(s).

Settings

On the roadmap: create a child theme (or themes) to provide end users with custom settings, possibly including:

  • static or fixed navbar
  • light or dark color
  • 2 or 3 column layout
  • custom logo
  • bootswatches

Success criteria

To have developed a theme that can be used as a base theme, that looks and feels like the default bootsrap interface. (see: examples.

Future developments

  • To make a responsive version
  • Create a library of custom renderers that can be used in themes to make UI changes
  • Add theme settings that allow administrators to change the layout of templates through the theme interface.

Current development

On the Moodle tracker issue [https://tracker.moodle.org/browse/MDL-38016 MDL-38016] is used for the review process of putting the bootstrap framework into core.

A Bootstrap development branch is used in this review process. There are several different bootstrap themes out there that can usefull as well.

These are some themes that use the bootstrap framework

Tiny Bootstrap

Download location: tiny-bootstrap-project

Description: This theme provides the basics of bootstrap

Current features are:

  • responsive
  • includes jQuery

Minimax

Download location: minimax

Description: This is a minimal version of the bootstrap theme based on Bootstrap dev

Current features are:

  • has all bootstrap CSS
  • not based on any core themes
  • minimum number of renderers
  • no jQuery / Yui javascript
  • responsive
  • 2-1-3 layout
  • uses less for CSS

Bootstrap renderers

Download location: bootstrap_renderers

Description: This is a experimental theme for developers. It includes many features and is great as a theme to learn from and t build on

Bootstrap dev

Download location: bootstrap_dev

Description: This is a development version of bootstrap theme that is being reviewed to be used as a core theme.

Features:

  • has all bootstrap css
  • not based on any core themes
  • docking enabled
  • theme settings: using custom css
  • theme settings: custom logos
  • theme settings: enabling jquery
  • theme settings: using glyphicons
  • responsive
  • 2-1-3 layout
  • uses less for CSS

Bootstrap

Download location: bootstrap

Description: This is the moodle theme that is available on the plugins database. It can be used for Moodle 2.2 - 2.4. This theme is very similar to Bootstrap dev

Features:

  • build on Moodle base theme
  • has all bootstrap css
  • based on the base theme
  • theme settings: using custom css
  • theme settings: custom logos
  • theme settings: enabling jquery
  • theme settings: using glyphicons
  • responsive
  • 1-2-3 layout

Roadmap

The Bootstrap dev theme needs some work.

Some of the elements to focus on:

  • Minimize CSS usage
  • Use Yui instead of jQuery
  • Test on all platforms

The Bootstrap minimax theme could be compared to the Bootstrap dev theme and the tiny bootstrap theme for core inclusion.

The current Bootstrap theme available on the plugins database will be updated with improvements that are discovered during the development of the dev branch but will remain available for Moodle 2.2 - 2.4.

Potential projects

Some projects that don't require knowledge of PHP to help with:

Bootstrap for Educational Content

Take some of your existing content, or freely available courses and use Bootstrap styles to format it. Maybe write a document, that uses Bootstrap styles to explain how to apply Bootstrap styles to educational content. Look at the Bootstrap documentation for inspiration, it not only tells you what is possible, it demonstrates many of them in its own presentation:

Bootstrap in Moodle content

There's plenty of places in Moodle that accept HTML and so can be spruced up with Bootstrap. For example, if you have a public access course, you could add a big green "start learning now" button with a white tick icon to the course description (or many other places on your site) just by using the following html:

   <a href="#" class="btn btn-success btn-large"><i class="icon-white icon-ok"></i> Start Learning Now</a>

and the href is simply pointing to the course like any normal link, yet the presentation is transformed. There's probably a million other examples, try coming up with some and sharing them. For experimenting with what's possible with buttons, try: http://www.plugolabs.com/twitter-bootstrap-button-generator/

Bootstrap editor

Of course, to do the above currently takes HTML coding. But it would be nice if you could just press buttons on a gui. Moodle allows plugin editors, maybe we could use this: http://jhollingworth.github.com/bootstrap-wysihtml5/

Bootstrap for TinyMCE

The current editor is actually incredibly flexible. It is themeable (http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Creating_a_theme) and Bootstrap comes with a range of editor icons. It should also be able to pick up and use classes from an editor.css file you feed it (http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration:content_css). It should be possible to create a better Bootstrap editor using this flexibility

Checkout the competition

There's all sorts of Bootstrap projects for various blog engines and content management systems. If you already use say Wordpress you could install some of them an report back anything useful, or just nice looking, that they do and you think would transfer across to Moodle. The new version of Joomla ([1]) also uses Bootstrap throughout the user and admin interface and can probably provide some inspiration.

Create alternate icon sprites

All the Bootstrap icons are merged into one single image to make things download faster. If you want to use a different set of icons you'll need to do the same. Instructions here: http://favbulous.com/post/1006/create-custom-icons-for-twitter-bootstrap-easily

Links to Discussions in Forums

Resources