This is revision 1.5612.
ol
elementli
element: Palpable content.li
elements.reversed
start
type
interface HTMLOListElement : HTMLElement { attribute boolean reversed; attribute long start; attribute DOMString type; };
The ol
element represents a list of
items, where the items have been intentionally ordered, such that
changing the order would change the meaning of the document.
The items of the list are the li
element child nodes
of the ol
element, in tree order.
The reversed
attribute is a boolean attribute. If present, it
indicates that the list is a descending list (..., 3, 2, 1). If the
attribute is omitted, the list is an ascending list (1, 2, 3,
...).
The start
attribute, if present, must be a valid integer giving
the ordinal value of the first list item.
If the start
attribute is
present, user agents must parse it as an integer, in order to determine the
attribute's value. The default value, used if the attribute is
missing or if the value cannot be converted to a number according to
the referenced algorithm, is 1 if the element has no reversed
attribute, and is the
number of child li
elements otherwise.
The first item in the list has the ordinal value
given by the ol
element's start
attribute, unless that
li
element has a value
attribute with a value that can
be successfully parsed, in which case it has the ordinal
value given by that value
attribute.
Each subsequent item in the list has the ordinal
value given by its value
attribute, if it has one, or, if it doesn't, the ordinal
value of the previous item, plus one if the reversed
is absent, or minus one if
it is present.
The type
attribute
can be used to specify the kind of marker to use in the list, in the
cases where that matters (e.g. because items are to be referenced by
their number/letter). The attribute, if specified, must have a value
that is a case-sensitive match for one of the
characters given in the first cell of one of the rows of the
following table. The type
attribute represents the state
given in the cell in the second column of the row whose first cell
matches the attribute's value; if none of the cells match, or if the
attribute is omitted, then the attribute represents the decimal state.
Keyword | State | Description | Examples for values 1-3 and 3999-4001 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 (U+0031)
| decimal | Decimal numbers | 1. | 2. | 3. | ... | 3999. | 4000. | 4001. | ... |
a (U+0061)
| lower-alpha | Lowercase latin alphabet | a. | b. | c. | ... | ewu. | ewv. | eww. | ... |
A (U+0041)
| upper-alpha | Uppercase latin alphabet | A. | B. | C. | ... | EWU. | EWV. | EWW. | ... |
i (U+0069)
| lower-roman | Lowercase roman numerals | i. | ii. | iii. | ... | mmmcmxcix. | i̅v̅. | i̅v̅i. | ... |
I (U+0049)
| upper-roman | Uppercase roman numerals | I. | II. | III. | ... | MMMCMXCIX. | I̅V̅. | I̅V̅I. | ... |
User agents should render the items of the list in a manner
consistent with the state of the type
attribute of the ol
element. Numbers less than or equal to zero should always use the
decimal system regardless of the type
attribute.
For CSS user agents, a mapping for this attribute to the 'list-style-type' CSS property is given in the rendering section (the mapping is straightforward: the states above have the same names as their corresponding CSS values).
The reversed
,
start
, and type
IDL attributes must
reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name. The start
IDL attribute has
the same default as its content attribute.
The following markup shows a list where the order matters, and
where the ol
element is therefore appropriate. Compare
this list to the equivalent list in the ul
section to
see an example of the same items using the ul
element.
<p>I have lived in the following countries (given in the order of when I first lived there):</p> <ol> <li>Switzerland <li>United Kingdom <li>United States <li>Norway </ol>
Note how changing the order of the list changes the meaning of the document. In the following example, changing the relative order of the first two items has changed the birthplace of the author:
<p>I have lived in the following countries (given in the order of when I first lived there):</p> <ol> <li>United Kingdom <li>Switzerland <li>United States <li>Norway </ol>