Border
Notation
Border utility classes can be defined using the format -b{sides}[-{breakpoint}]--{size}.
{sides}
t- use to applyborder-topb- use to applyborder-bottoml- use to applyborder-leftr- use to applyborder-rightx- use to applyborder-leftandborder-righty- use to applyborder-topandborder-bottom- blank - leave blank to apply
borderto all 4 sides.
{breakpoint}
Optionally, include -{breakpoint} to apply the utility behaviour to some breakpoints. As a mobile-first library, any applying to smaller breakpoints will also modify larger ones unless another class overrides this behaviour.
- blank - leave blank to apply
borderto all breakpoints. sm- use to applyborderto sm and larger breakpoints.md- use to applyborderto md and larger breakpoints.lg- use to applyborderto lg and larger breakpoints.xl- use to applyborderto xl breakpoints.
{size}
0- use to eliminate existingborderand set to01- use to setborderto1px2- use to setborderto2px3- use to setborderto3px4- use to setborderto4px
Examples
Border Sides #
Apply borders to specific sides of an element by adding t, b, l, r, x or y to the class name.
Breakpoints #
Target specific breakpoints with responsive classes.
-bx-lg--4 -by-lg--0
-b-md--2 -b-lg--3
-b-xl--4
Border Sizes #
Control an element's border size by adjusting the size from 0 - 4.
Border Colors
Use contextual color classes to change a border's color.
Brand #
Brand border colors reinforce Lumen's brand. Use primary and secondary as accents and base, black, and white as neutrals.
Semantic #
Use semantic border colors to communicate meaning to users. Use green (success) for positive, blue (info) for informative, red (danger) for negative, and yellow (warning) for needs attention.
Transparent #
Use the transparent border color as a method to hide an element's border without altering its size.
Responsive #
Use breakpoint classes to change an element's border color on different viewports. Follow the format -b[-{breakpoint}]--{color}.