Quick Reference
The <ul> tag defines an unordered list which uses various bullet types before each list item.
<ul>
<li>Maserati</li>
<li>Alfa Romeo</li>
<li>Ferrari</li>
</ul>
- Maserati
- Alfa Romeo
- Ferrari
Attributes
Unordered lists use the <ul> tag and the list items within use the <li> tag. The list items will be marked with a small black dot (disc) by default.
These bullet types can be changed using the following attributes.
Bullet Type | Description |
---|---|
disc | Sets the list item marker to a dot (default) |
circle | Sets the list item marker to a circle |
square | Sets the list item marker to a square |
none | The list items will not have a bullet of any kind |
HTML Notes:
- In our HTML section the term “tag” and “element” are often used interchangeably to refer to both the tag used to create a page element and the element created by the tag (<p> tag = <p> element = paragraph on the page)
- HTML5 is not case sensitive; so <P> is the same as <p>, <H1> is the same as <h1>
- Global attributes can be used with all HTML tags and are therefore not mentioned on every tag page
- To write clean, readable HTML code, it is best to use indentation whereas elements within elements are indented (tabbed or spaces) to create something that looks like a project outline
- The browser will automatically remove any extra spaces and lines in your HTML code when the page is displayed
- Double quotes or single quotes can be used around HTML attribute values, but when the attribute value itself contains one form of quote, it will be necessary to use the other around the attribute
We’d like to acknowledge that we learned a great deal of our coding from W3Schools and TutorialsPoint, borrowing heavily from their teaching process and excellent code examples. We highly recommend both sites to deepen your experience, and further your coding journey. We’re just hitting the basics here at 1SMARTchicken.