Carousel A slideshow component for cycling through elements—images or slides of text—like a carousel.
How it works
The carousel is a slideshow for cycling through a series of content, built with CSS 3D transforms and a bit of JavaScript. It works with a series of images, text, or custom markup. It also includes support for previous/next controls and indicators.
The carousel is a slideshow for cycling through a series of content, built with CSS 3D transforms and a bit of JavaScript. It works with a series of images, text, or custom markup. It also includes support for previous/next controls and indicators.
Kitchen sink example
Carousels don’t automatically normalize slide dimensions. As such, you may need to use additional utilities or custom styles to appropriately size content. While carousels support previous/next controls and indicators, they’re not explicitly required. Add and customize as you see fit.
The
The
.active
class needs to be added to one of the slides otherwise the carousel will not be visible. Also be sure to set a unique id on the .carousel
for optional controls, especially if you’re using multiple carousels on a single page. Control and indicator elements must have a data-target
attribute (or href
for links) that matches the id of the .carousel
element.
Slides only
Notice presence of the
.d-block
and .w-100
on carousel images
Control example
Adding in previous and next controls
Interval example
Add
data-interval=""
to a .carousel-item
to change the amount of time to delay between automatically cycling to the next item. E.g The first image will change after 10 seconds, the second one will change after 2 seconds, and the following will change as default settings.
Indicators example
You can also add the indicators to the carousel, alongside the controls, too
Crossfade example
Add
.carousel-fade
to your carousel to animate slides with a fade transition instead of a slide
Add captions
Add captions to your slides easily with the
.carousel-caption
element within any .carousel-item
. They can be easily hidden on smaller viewports, as shown below, with optional display utilities. We hide them initially with .d-none
and bring them back on medium-sized devices with .d-md-block