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Lists
Every once in a while a list can be very handy. You can use them to show ingredients in a recipe or as a table of contents for your document. HTML markup has two different kinds of lists – the ordered and the unordered lists.
The unordered list starts with the opening tag <ul> (abbreviation of unordered list) and every item on list is surrounded by the <li> tag (li stands for list item)
<ul>
<li>List item no. 1</li>
<li>List item no. 2</li>
<li>List item no. 3</li>
</ul>
This HTML markup would result in an unordered list that looks like this:
- List item no. 1
- List item no. 2
- List item no. 3
Generally the unordered list has black circles as bullet points – you can actually change how the bullet points should look, using CSS.
The ordered list looks like this:
- First list-item
- Second list-item
- Third list-item
And instead of the <ul> tag, you use the <ol> (abbreviation for ordered list)
<ol>
<li>List item no. 1</li>
<li>List item no. 2</li>
<li>List item no. 3</li>
</ol>
Except for the obvious reason to use the list (when you actually want a list) a lot of webdesigners use the list to create their menus and navigations – as the navigation very often is a set of related links. Using the list to markup your navigation also means, that if the CSS styling fails the links will still be semantically related.
What you have learned
- There are two different kinds of lists – ordered lists and unordered lists
- The tag for en ordered list is <ol>
- The tag for the unordered list is <ul>
- Every item on the list is marked up with the <li> element
- The list element is an obvious choice when create your navigation