Small and adaptive tag for adding context to just about any content.
OverviewBadges scale to match the size of the immediate parent element by using relative font sizing and em
units.
<div> <h2>Example heading <b-badge>New</b-badge></h2> <h3>Example heading <b-badge>New</b-badge></h3> <h4>Example heading <b-badge>New</b-badge></h4> <h5>Example heading <b-badge>New</b-badge></h5> <h6>Example heading <b-badge>New</b-badge></h6> </div>
Badges can be used as part of links or buttons to provide a counter (or similar flag).
<div class="text-center"> <b-button variant="primary"> Notifications <b-badge variant="light">4</b-badge> </b-button> </div>
Note that depending on how they are used, badges may be confusing for users of screen readers and similar assistive technologies. While the styling of badges provides a visual cue as to their purpose, these users will simply be presented with the content of the badge. Depending on the specific situation, these badges may seem like random additional words or numbers at the end of a sentence, link, or button.
Unless the context is clear (as with the "Notifications" example, where it is understood that the "4" is the number of notifications), consider including additional context with a visually hidden piece of additional text.
<div class="text-center"> <b-button variant="primary"> Profile <b-badge variant="light">9 <span class="sr-only">unread messages</span></b-badge> </b-button> </div>Contextual variations
Add any of the following variants via the variant
prop to change the appearance of a <b-badge>
: default
, primary
, success
, warning
, info
, and danger
. If no variant is specified default
will be used.
<div> <b-badge variant="primary">Primary</b-badge> <b-badge variant="secondary">Secondary</b-badge> <b-badge variant="success">Success</b-badge> <b-badge variant="danger">Danger</b-badge> <b-badge variant="warning">Warning</b-badge> <b-badge variant="info">Info</b-badge> <b-badge variant="light">Light</b-badge> <b-badge variant="dark">Dark</b-badge> </div>Conveying meaning to assistive technologies
Using color to add meaning only provides a visual indication, which will not be conveyed to users of assistive technologies – such as screen readers. Ensure that information denoted by the color is either obvious from the content itself (e.g. the visible text), or is included through alternative means, such as additional text hidden with the .sr-only
class.
Use the pill
prop to make badges more rounded (with a larger border-radius and additional horizontal padding). Useful if you miss the badges from Bootstrap v3.
<div> <b-badge pill variant="primary">Primary</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="secondary">Secondary</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="success">Success</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="danger">Danger</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="warning">Warning</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="info">Info</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="light">Light</b-badge> <b-badge pill variant="dark">Dark</b-badge> </div>Actionable badges
Quickly provide actionable badges with hover and focus states by specifying either the href
prop (links) or to
prop (router-links):
<div> <b-badge href="#" variant="primary">Primary</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="secondary">Secondary</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="success">Success</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="danger">Danger</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="warning">Warning</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="info">Info</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="light">Light</b-badge> <b-badge href="#" variant="dark">Dark</b-badge> </div>
Refer to the Router support reference page for router-link specific props.
Component reference PropertiesAll property default values are globally configurable.
Property
(Click to sort ascending)Type
(Click to sort ascending)Default
Description
active
Boolean
false
When set to `true`, places the component in the active state with active styling active-class
String
<router-link> prop: Configure the active CSS class applied when the link is active. Typically you will want to set this to class name 'active' append
Boolean
false
<router-link> prop: Setting append prop always appends the relative path to the current path disabled
Boolean
false
When set to `true`, disables the component's functionality and places it in a disabled state exact
Boolean
false
<router-link> prop: The default active class matching behavior is inclusive match. Setting this prop forces the mode to exactly match the route exact-active-class
String
<router-link> prop: Configure the active CSS class applied when the link is active with exact match. Typically you will want to set this to class name 'active' exact-path
Boolean
false
<router-link> prop: Allows matching only using the path section of the url, effectively ignoring the query and the hash sections exact-path-active-class
String
<router-link> prop: Configure the active CSS class applied when the link is active with exact path match. Typically you will want to set this to class name 'active' href
String
<b-link> prop: Denotes the target URL of the link for standard a links no-prefetch
Boolean
false
<nuxt-link> prop: To improve the responsiveness of your Nuxt.js applications, when the link will be displayed within the viewport, Nuxt.js will automatically prefetch the code splitted page. Setting `no-prefetch` will disabled this feature for the specific link pill
Boolean
false
When set to 'true', renders the badge in pill style prefetch
Boolean
null
<nuxt-link> prop: To improve the responsiveness of your Nuxt.js applications, when the link will be displayed within the viewport, Nuxt.js will automatically prefetch the code splitted page. Setting `prefetch` to `true` or `false` will overwrite the default value of `router.prefetchLinks` rel
String
null
<b-link> prop: Sets the `rel` attribute on the rendered link replace
Boolean
false
<router-link> prop: Setting the replace prop will call `router.replace()` instead of `router.push()` when clicked, so the navigation will not leave a history record router-component-name
String
<b-link> prop: BootstrapVue auto detects between `<router-link>` and `<nuxt-link>`. In cases where you want to use a 3rd party link component based on `<router-link>`, set this prop to the component name. e.g. set it to 'g-link' if you are using Gridsome (note only `<router-link>` specific props are passed to the component) tag
String
'span'
Specify the HTML tag to render instead of the default tag target
String
'_self'
<b-link> prop: Sets the `target` attribute on the rendered link to
Object
or String
<router-link> prop: Denotes the target route of the link. When clicked, the value of the to prop will be passed to `router.push()` internally, so the value can be either a string or a Location descriptor object variant
String
'secondary'
Applies one of the Bootstrap theme color variants to the component
<b-badge>
supports generating <router-link>
or <nuxt-link>
component (if using Nuxt.js). For more details on the router link (or nuxt link) specific props, see the Router support reference section.
Name
Description
default
Content to place in the badge Importing individual components
You can import individual components into your project via the following named exports:
Component
Named Export
Import Path
<b-badge>
BBadge
bootstrap-vue
Example:
import { BBadge } from 'bootstrap-vue' Vue.component('b-badge', BBadge)Importing as a Vue.js plugin
This plugin includes all of the above listed individual components. Plugins also include any component aliases.
Named Export
Import Path
BadgePlugin
bootstrap-vue
Example:
import { BadgePlugin } from 'bootstrap-vue' Vue.use(BadgePlugin)
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