Popovers
Documentation and examples for adding Bootstrap popovers, like those found in iOS, to any element on your site.
Overview
Things to know when using the popover plugin:
-
Popovers rely on the third party library Popper for
positioning. You must include
popper.min.js
before
bootstrap.js, or use onebootstrap.bundle.min.jswhich contains Popper. - Popovers require the popover plugin as a dependency.
- Popovers are opt-in for performance reasons, so you must initialize them yourself.
- Zero-length
titleandcontentvalues will never show a popover. -
Specify
container: 'body'to avoid rendering problems in more complex components (like our input groups, button groups, etc). - Triggering popovers on hidden elements will not work.
-
Popovers for
.disabledordisabledelements must be triggered on a wrapper element. -
When triggered from anchors that wrap across multiple lines, popovers will be centered between the
anchors’ overall width. Use
.text-nowrapon your<a>s to avoid this behavior. - Popovers must be hidden before their corresponding elements have been removed from the DOM.
- Popovers can be triggered thanks to an element inside a shadow DOM.
By default, this component uses the built-in content sanitizer, which strips out any HTML elements that are not explicitly allowed. See the sanitizer section in our JavaScript documentation for more details.
The animation effect of this component is dependent on the prefers-reduced-motion media
query. See the
reduced motion section of our accessibility documentation.
Keep reading to see how popovers work with some examples.
Examples
Enable popovers
As mentioned above, you must initialize popovers before they can be used. One way to initialize all
popovers on a page would be to select them by their data-bs-toggle attribute, like so:
const popoverTriggerList = document.querySelectorAll('[data-bs-toggle="popover"]');
const popoverList = [...popoverTriggerList].map((popoverTriggerEl) => new bootstrap.Popover(popoverTriggerEl));
Live demo
We use JavaScript similar to the snippet above to render the following live popover. Titles are set
via data-bs-title and body content is set via data-bs-content.
Feel free to use either title or data-bs-title in your HTML. When
title is used, Popper will replace it automatically with
data-bs-title when the element is rendered.
Four directions
Four options are available: top, right, bottom, and left. Directions are mirrored when using Bootstrap
in RTL. Set data-bs-placement to change the direction.
Custom container
When you have some styles on a parent element that interfere with a popover, you’ll want to specify a
custom container so that the popover’s HTML appears within that element instead. This is
common in responsive tables, input groups, and the like.
const popover = new bootstrap.Popover('.example-popover', {
container: 'body'
});
Another situation where you’ll want to set an explicit custom container are popovers
inside a modal dialog, to make sure that the popover itself is
appended to the modal. This is particularly important for popovers that contain interactive elements –
modal dialogs will trap focus, so unless the popover is a child element of the modal, users won’t be
able to focus or activate these interactive elements.
const popover = new bootstrap.Popover('.example-popover', {
container: '.modal-body'
});
Dismiss on next click
Use the focus trigger to dismiss popovers on the user’s next click of an element other
than the toggle element.
Dismissing on next click requires specific HTML for proper cross-browser and cross-platform
behavior.
You can only use <a> elements, not <button>s, and you must
include a
tabindex.
const popover = new bootstrap.Popover('.popover-dismiss', {
trigger: 'focus'
});
Disabled elements
Elements with the disabled attribute aren’t interactive, meaning users cannot hover or
click them to trigger a popover (or tooltip). As a workaround, you’ll want to trigger the popover from
a wrapper <div> or <span>, ideally made keyboard-focusable using
tabindex="0".
For disabled popover triggers, you may also prefer
data-bs-trigger="hover focus" so that the popover appears as immediate visual
feedback to your users as they may not expect to click on a disabled element.
Usage
Enable popovers via JavaScript:
const exampleEl = document.getElementById('example');
const popover = new bootstrap.Popover(exampleEl, options);
Keep popovers accessible to keyboard and assistive technology users by only adding
them to HTML elements that are traditionally keyboard-focusable and interactive (such as links or
form controls). While other HTML elements can be made focusable by adding
tabindex="0", this can create annoying and confusing tab stops on
non-interactive elements for keyboard users, and most assistive technologies currently do not
announce popovers in this situation. Additionally, do not rely solely on hover as the
trigger for your popovers as this will make them impossible to trigger for keyboard users.
Avoid adding an excessive amount of content in popovers with the html option. Once
popovers are displayed, their content is tied to the trigger element with the
aria-describedby attribute, causing all of the popover’s content to be announced to
assistive technology users as one long, uninterrupted stream.
Popovers do not manage keyboard focus order, and their placement can be random in the DOM, so be careful when adding interactive elements (like forms or links), as it may lead to an illogical focus order or make the popover content itself completely unreachable for keyboard users. In cases where you must use these elements, consider using a modal dialog instead.
Options
As options can be passed via data attributes or JavaScript, you can append an option name to
data-bs-, as in data-bs-animation="{value}". Make sure to change
the case type of the option name from “camelCase” to “kebab-case” when passing the
options via data attributes. For example, use
data-bs-custom-class="beautifier" instead of
data-bs-customClass="beautifier".
As of Bootstrap 5.2.0, all components support an experimental reserved data attribute
data-bs-config that can house simple component configuration as a JSON string. When an
element has data-bs-config='{"delay":0, "title":123}' and
data-bs-title="456" attributes, the final title value will be
456 and the separate data attributes will override values given on
data-bs-config. In addition, existing data attributes are able to house JSON values like
data-bs-delay='{"show":0,"hide":150}'.
The final configuration object is the merged result of data-bs-config,
data-bs-, and js object where the latest given key-value overrides the
others.
Note that for security reasons the sanitize, sanitizeFn, and
allowList options cannot be supplied using data attributes.
| Name | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
allowList |
object | Default value |
An object containing allowed tags and attributes. Those not explicitly allowed will be removed
by
the content sanitizer.
Exercise caution when adding to this list. Refer to
OWASP’s Cross Site Scripting Prevention Cheat Sheet
for more information.
|
animation |
boolean | true |
Apply a CSS fade transition to the popover. |
boundary |
string, element | 'clippingParents' |
Overflow constraint boundary of the popover (applies only to Popper’s preventOverflow
modifier). By default, it’s 'clippingParents' and can accept an
HTMLElement reference (via JavaScript only). For more information refer to Popper’s
detectOverflow docs.
|
container |
string, element, false | false |
Appends the popover to a specific element. Example: container: 'body'.
This option is particularly useful in that it allows you to position the popover in the flow
of the document near the triggering element - which will prevent the popover from floating
away from the triggering element during a window resize.
|
content |
string, element, function | '' |
The popover’s text content. If a function is given, it will be called with its
this reference set to the element that the popover is attached to.
|
customClass |
string, function | '' |
Add classes to the popover when it is shown. Note that these classes will be added in addition
to any classes specified in the template. To add multiple classes, separate them with spaces:
'class-1 class-2'. You can also pass a function that should return a
single string containing additional class names.
|
delay |
number, object | 0 |
Delay showing and hiding the popover (ms)—doesn’t apply to manual trigger type. If a number is
supplied, delay is applied to both hide/show. Object structure is:
delay: { "show": 500, "hide": 100 }.
|
fallbackPlacements |
string, array | ['top', 'right', 'bottom', 'left'] |
Define fallback placements by providing a list of placements in array (in order of preference). For more information refer to Popper’s behavior docs. |
html |
boolean | false |
Allow HTML in the popover. If true, HTML tags in the popover’s title will be
rendered in the popover. If false, innerText property will be used to insert
content into the DOM. Prefer text when dealing with user-generated input to
prevent XSS attacks.
|
offset |
number, string, function | [0, 8] |
Offset of the popover relative to its target. You can pass a string in data attributes with
comma separated values like: data-bs-offset="10,20". When a function is
used to determine the offset, it is called with an object containing the popper placement, the
reference, and popper rects as its first argument. The triggering element DOM node is passed
as the second argument. The function must return an array with two numbers:
skidding,
distance. For more
information refer to Popper’s
offset docs.
|
placement |
string, function | 'right' |
How to position the popover: auto, top, bottom, left, right. When auto is
specified, it will dynamically reorient the popover. When a function is used to determine the
placement, it is called with the popover DOM node as its first argument and the triggering
element DOM node as its second. The this context is set to the popover instance.
|
popperConfig |
null, object, function | null |
To change Bootstrap’s default Popper config, see Popper’s configuration. When a function is used to create the Popper configuration, it’s called with an object that contains the Bootstrap’s default Popper configuration. It helps you use and merge the default with your own configuration. The function must return a configuration object for Popper. |
sanitize |
boolean | true |
Enable
content sanitization.
If true, the template, content and title options will
be sanitized.
Exercise caution when disabling content sanitization. Refer to
OWASP’s Cross Site Scripting Prevention Cheat Sheet
for more information. Vulnerabilities caused solely by disabling content sanitization are
not considered within scope for Bootstrap’s security model.
|
sanitizeFn |
null, function | null |
Provide an alternative content sanitization function. This can be useful if you prefer to use a dedicated library to perform sanitization. |
selector |
string, false | false |
If a selector is provided, popover objects will be delegated to the specified targets. In
practice, this is used to also apply popovers to dynamically added DOM elements (jQuery.on
support). See this issue and
an informative example.
Note: title attribute must not be used as a selector.
|
template |
string |
'<div class="popover" role="tooltip"><div
class="popover-arrow"></div><h3
class="popover-header"></h3><div
class="popover-body"></div></div>'
|
Base HTML to use when creating the popover. The popover’s title will be injected
into the .popover-header. The popover’s content will be injected
into the .popover-body. .popover-arrow will become the popover’s
arrow. The outermost wrapper element should have the .popover class and
role="tooltip".
|
title |
string, element, function | '' |
The popover title. If a function is given, it will be called with its
this reference set to the element that the popover is attached to.
|
trigger |
string | 'click' |
How popover is triggered: click, hover, focus, manual. You may pass multiple triggers;
separate them with a space. 'manual' indicates that the popover will be
triggered programmatically via the .popover('show'),
.popover('hide') and .popover('toggle') methods;
this value cannot be combined with any other trigger. 'hover' on its own
will result in popovers that cannot be triggered via the keyboard, and should only be used if
alternative methods for conveying the same information for keyboard users is present.
|
Data attributes for individual popovers
Options for individual popovers can alternatively be specified through the use of data attributes, as explained above.
Using function with popperConfig
const popover = new bootstrap.Popover(element, {
popperConfig(defaultBsPopperConfig) {
// const newPopperConfig = {...}
// use defaultBsPopperConfig if needed...
// return newPopperConfig
}
});
Methods
All API methods are asynchronous and start a transition. They return to the caller as soon as the transition is started, but before it ends. In addition, a method call on a transitioning component will be ignored. Learn more in our JavaScript docs.
| Method | Description |
|---|---|
disable |
Removes the ability for an element’s popover to be shown. The popover will only be able to be shown if it is re-enabled. |
dispose |
Hides and destroys an element’s popover (Removes stored data on the DOM element). Popovers
that use delegation (which are created using
the selector option) cannot be individually destroyed on
descendant trigger elements.
|
enable |
Gives an element’s popover the ability to be shown. Popovers are enabled by default. |
getInstance |
Static method which allows you to get the popover instance associated with a DOM element. |
getOrCreateInstance |
Static method which allows you to get the popover instance associated with a DOM element, or create a new one in case it wasn’t initialized. |
hide |
Hides an element’s popover.
Returns to the caller before the popover has actually been hidden (i.e.
before the hidden.bs.popover event occurs). This is considered a “manual”
triggering of the popover.
|
setContent |
Gives a way to change the popover’s content after its initialization. |
show |
Reveals an element’s popover.
Returns to the caller before the popover has actually been shown (i.e. before
the shown.bs.popover event occurs). This is considered a “manual” triggering of
the popover. Popovers whose title and content are both zero-length are never displayed.
|
toggle |
Toggles an element’s popover.
Returns to the caller before the popover has actually been shown or hidden
(i.e. before the shown.bs.popover or hidden.bs.popover event
occurs). This is considered a “manual” triggering of the popover.
|
toggleEnabled |
Toggles the ability for an element’s popover to be shown or hidden. |
update |
Updates the position of an element’s popover. |
// getOrCreateInstance example
const popover = bootstrap.Popover.getOrCreateInstance('#example'); // Returns a Bootstrap popover instance
// setContent example
popover.setContent({
'.popover-header': 'another title',
'.popover-body': 'another content'
});
The setContent method accepts an object argument, where each property-key
is a valid string selector within the popover template, and each related property-value
can be string | element | function | null
Events
| Event | Description |
|---|---|
hide.bs.popover |
This event is fired immediately when the hide instance method has been called.
|
hidden.bs.popover |
This event is fired when the popover has finished being hidden from the user (will wait for CSS transitions to complete). |
inserted.bs.popover |
This event is fired after the show.bs.popover event when the popover template has
been added to the DOM.
|
show.bs.popover |
This event fires immediately when the show instance method is called. |
shown.bs.popover |
This event is fired when the popover has been made visible to the user (will wait for CSS transitions to complete). |
const myPopoverTrigger = document.getElementById('myPopover');
myPopoverTrigger.addEventListener('hidden.bs.popover', () => {
// do something...
});