Welcome to the Treehouse Community
Want to collaborate on code errors? Have bugs you need feedback on? Looking for an extra set of eyes on your latest project? Get support with fellow developers, designers, and programmers of all backgrounds and skill levels here with the Treehouse Community! While you're at it, check out some resources Treehouse students have shared here.
Looking to learn something new?
Treehouse offers a seven day free trial for new students. Get access to thousands of hours of content and join thousands of Treehouse students and alumni in the community today.
Start your free trialGoldSpec Digital
4,185 PointsBootstrap in the workplace
Hi there,
I'm hoping to eventually get a job as a font-end web dev and I was just wondering, in the real world, how reliant on Bootstrap are frontends in the workplace?
I feel like the grid system is acceptable to use, however everything else really a frontend should do themselves?
Any thought and advice from frontends who are in the industry would be greatly appreciated :)
3 Answers
Luke Pettway
16,593 PointsFrom my experience it varies a lot. I've worked at smaller agencies and those tend to focus more on using UI frameworks like Bootstrap and Foundation. Currently where I work we have a base UI library that we built from scratch that is very minimalist. It has a lot of mixins that we use a lot, as well as a common grid system which our designers work with. Many larger companies have the money to write their own custom UI's so they tend to not rely on Bootstrap at all.
One thing you can do is look at the companies you are applying to and see what sort of UI frameworks they use (if any). You can tell by looking at their own website, or if they showcase any client sites.
Either way it is definitely useful to have a working knowledge of all the primary UI technologies that exist because you'll occasionally get clients who have a preference for one over another.
GoldSpec Digital
4,185 PointsThanks for that, really appreciate the advice!
Jeff Sanders
Courses Plus Student 9,503 PointsI work at a company with several design and development teams. Some use Bootstrap and some don't. But as we begin to migrate to a new common pattern library, we will not be using Bootstrap at all. That being said, the amount of research and testing that has been put into the current state of Bootstrap is invaluable. Even if you don't use it in your projects, I recommend using its documentation to inform your own design decisions.
Gabriel Plackey
11,064 PointsThe company I currently work for does not use bootstrap at all. They use vue a decent amount. But no boostrap. For a front end dev they actually have one skill test like thing were they have two days to build a responsive website/layout without using any bootstrap. Which surprisingly a lot of people struggle with.
So I would at least be comfortable doing that.
GoldSpec Digital
4,185 PointsOh thats interesting, so I suppose that would mean they're heavily reliant on Flexbox for that?
Sorin Chircu
45,432 PointsThey use a lot of floats? I thought floats were obsolete with so many options nowadays. I mean, you have bootstrap, flexbox, grid. They make things so much simpler. Do you think a lot of companies still use float? Because i kinda skipped it when I got to know flexbox and how it's so much better
Gabriel Plackey
11,064 PointsGabriel Plackey
11,064 PointsThey don't rely on flexbox that much actually. Not as much as I would personally like. They use a lot of floats and a whole ton, and I mean A TON of media queries. It can get very tedious.