Skip to content
Au Lab
  • Home
  • People
  • Research
  • News
  • Publications
  • Contact/Join Us
Site Search
Edge Case

Edge Case: Nested And Mixed Lists

  • May 15, 2015
  • by Aigars

Nested and mixed lists are an interesting beast. It’s a corner case to make sure that

  • Lists within lists do not break the ordered list numbering order
  • Your list styles go deep enough.

Ordered – Unordered – Ordered

  1. ordered item
  2. ordered item
    • unordered
    • unordered
      1. ordered item
      2. ordered item
  3. ordered item
  4. ordered item

Ordered – Unordered – Unordered

  1. ordered item
  2. ordered item
    • unordered
    • unordered
      • unordered item
      • unordered item
  3. ordered item
  4. ordered item

Unordered – Ordered – Unordered

  • unordered item
  • unordered item
    1. ordered
    2. ordered
      • unordered item
      • unordered item
  • unordered item
  • unordered item

Unordered – Unordered – Ordered

  • unordered item
  • unordered item
    • unordered
    • unordered
      1. ordered item
      2. ordered item
  • unordered item
  • unordered item
Template: Featured Image (Vertical)
Markup: Title With Markup
  • Email
    s.au@imperial.ac.uk
  • Address
    Imperial College London
    Royal School of Mines 4.38
    London SW7 2AZ
© Sam Au
Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress