Since margin utilities have many variations and will be used in many places, we use a shorthand naming convention to help keep class names succinct.
Shorthand | Description |
---|---|
m | margin |
t | top |
r | right |
b | bottom |
l | left |
x | horizontal, left & right |
y | vertical, top & bottom |
0 | 0 |
1 | 4px |
2 | 8px |
3 | 16px |
4 | 24px |
5 | 32px |
6 | 40px |
7 | 48px |
8 | 64px |
9 | 80px |
10 | 96px |
11 | 112px |
12 | 128px |
Use uniform spacing utilities to apply equal margin to all sides of an element. These utilities can change or override default margins, and can be used with a spacing scale from 0-6.
Use directional utilities to apply margin to an individual side, or the X and Y axis of an element. Directional utilities can change or override default margins, and can be used with a spacing scale of 0-6.
The extended scale starts from spacer 7
up to 12
. Note: Only the y-axis (mt
, mb
and my
) and its responsive variants are supported.
Use mx-auto
to center block elements with a set width.
We also provide directional margin auto. mt-auto, mr-auto, mb-auto, ml-auto
Reset margins built into typography elements or other components with m-0
, mt-0
, mr-0
, mb-0
, ml-0
, mx-0
, and my-0
.
All margin utilities can be adjusted per breakpoint using the following formula: m[direction]-[breakpoint]-[spacer]
. Each responsive style is applied to the specified breakpoint and up.
You can add negative margins to the top, right, bottom, or left of an item by adding a negative margin utility. The formula for this is: m[direction]-n[spacer]
, where spacer
runs from 1
to 6
. This also works responsively, with the following formula: m[direction]-[breakpoint]-n[spacer]
.
You can use the extended spacing scale for top
and bottom
margins, ranging from 1
to 12
.