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@bolt/components-sticky
Advanced tools
Sticky makes any component sticky to the top of the page. Part of the Bolt “Components” CSS framework that powers the Bolt Design System.
{% embed "@bolt/sticky.twig" %}
{% block sticky_content %}
<div style="background-color: white">
Sticky content goes here
</div>
{% endblock %}
{% endembed %}
npm install @bolt/components-sticky
The best way to start using Bolt is via the Bolt Starterkit (coming soon), a pre-assembled front-end boilerplate designed to get you up and running as quickly as possible.
You can also use the full Bolt Core CSS framework on its own, or, install just the parts you need and fold the different ITCSS layers of Bolt into your existing codebase.
Installing Bolt’s Sticky component is as easy as running NPM install:
npm install @bolt/components-sticky
TIP:: Don’t have a
package.json
file? Need a little help getting started? Check out our Getting Started guide for some tips to help get you up to speed.
Once installed, you should @import
the main Sass partial into your project’s main .scss
file to make the included variables available to the rest of your code.
// Settings
...
// Tools
...
Since Bolt’s CSS architecture is based on ITCSS (Inverted Triangle CSS)1, what Sass partials you import, and in what order, makes a whole world of difference. That’s why importing any Settings packages from Bolt in your project’s Settings layer (prior to any Sass mixins, resets, base HTML element styles, etc) is so important.
We recommend using Bolt’s Gulp-based front-end build tools to compile your Sass as we’re pre-packaging many of the latest tools and add-ons to help you write your very best: LibSass, Autoprefixer, PostCSS, CleanCSS, Sassdoc, Stylelint, Gulp Plumber, npm-sass, and BrowserSync live reloading.
FAQs
A content container that enables content to be sticky.
The npm package @bolt/components-sticky receives a total of 95 weekly downloads. As such, @bolt/components-sticky popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @bolt/components-sticky demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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