Ghostdancing
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Hi there @Penny! The <ol> tags use type="" attribute to define the ordination. This is a very important concept, and a basic one. <ul>s don't work with the attribute type="".
Ordered/Unordered Lists can work with the property list-style-type="" because they are lists whatsoever, but ordered lists must have a type of...ordination item, A, a, i, I or number.
Unordered List (The order doesn't matter, we don't need indicators of an item's priority.) || Ordered List (The order matters, we need indicators of an item's priority.)
. Hey a) This is more important to know before all;
. There b) Ordered lists are often legal or technical documents like @Ingolme pointed;
. Hello c) That's why we need importance' scale.Hope I could help! https://www.w3schools.com/html/html_lists.asp
Help with HTML lists please
in General
Posted · Edited by Ghostdancing
It seems I didn't make myself clear. @Penny asked what are the differences and there are. Ordered lists require...ordination, let's look in the dictionary: The noun ordination comes from the Latin word ordinare, meaning “put in order.”
Primary Meanings of
ordination
arrangement
Suppose you have to code something that only reads the second itens of lists.
Suppose you have to code something that reads the third itens of a list but only the lists that have the type="A".
Let's code.