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I have found some info on container use in Several containers at one page and Twitter Bootstrap Containers, but was left wanting a bit more input.

From Twitter Bootstrap's own example we see multiple container divs on the same page. But what about ASP.Net MasterPages and UserControls.

Should a single container be used on the Master, therefore enclosing all Content areas in a single top-level container (and then the Content pages would be comprised of row divs)? Or should the container div be pushed down to the Content page?

And taking this one step further, what about a rather complicated UserControl (.ascx) that is comprised of several row divs; should the ascx markup have its own container, or start with a row div assuming the containing page has an enclosing container?

Finally, more generally, does anyone have a rule-of-thumb regarding when to use a new container div?

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I put the container div in my master page since all my pages will be using the row/span's in the child pages. In the unlikely event that I want my child page to not use the container, I simply close the div tags...

<asp:Content ID="Content2" ContentPlaceHolderID="MainContent" runat="server">
  </div> <!-- ending the container -->

  <!-- whatever -->

  <div> <!-- the master page ends the container div, so we'll add this instead -->
</asp:Content>

A few helpful hints with bootstrap and asp.net...

Radio buttons and checkboxes. The text appears underneath the radio/checkbox. Fix this by nesting your asp.net radio button list control or similar control inside a div with the radio css class or checkbox css class, and setting the RepeatLayout to flow.

<div class="radio">
    <asp:RadioButtonList ID="rblFleettype" runat="server" RepeatLayout="Flow">
        <asp:ListItem Selected="True">Item 1</asp:ListItem>
        <asp:ListItem>Item 2</asp:ListItem>
    </asp:RadioButtonList>
</div>

Alerts for error messages. A lot of asp.net controls can be converted to templates to expose the error literals/labels, then you can apply CssClass="alert alert-error" to the error label. But if you do this it will show the red error boundaries even when there is no error yet. To fix that you can use the PreRender event for the literal/label to check the Text property and see if it's empty, and then set the Visibility property accordingly.

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  • Thanks for the tip on closing the container on the Content page. And great additional info on the asp.net controls. WRT Bootstrap containers, do you have any feelings on whether it is ok to nest container divs or is it better to keep the container at the "outer" level?
    – dstelow
    Jul 6, 2012 at 16:16
  • Outer level I think. The container class has the width: 940px; property. So nesting that inside anything less than a span12 is probably not a good idea. You can nest rows inside other rows, example. If you are wanting to nest a container inside some span##, bootstrap has container-fluid. You can nest away all you want with that. You can look at the usage in that link above.
    – Theo
    Jul 6, 2012 at 16:36
  • Thanks much. I have what I need now.
    – dstelow
    Jul 9, 2012 at 16:31

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