Creating bulleted, numbered, and definition lists | |
In Wiki pages and other contexts that support Wiki formatting (including articles, forums, and blogs), you can easily create bulleted, numbered, and definition lists. In numbered lists, Tiki numbers the items automatically. You can also create nested lists. The following sections explain the details; see the Quick Reference for an overview. Scroll down to Help! if something goes wrong. |
Quick reference | ||||||
Tip If you forget which character to use while you're editing, click the Wiki Quick Help tab. |
Creating a bulleted list | |
If you type an asterisk (*) at the beginning of a line, Tiki places a bullet (a black dot) at the beginning of the line. The line is indented and formatted with a hanging indent, so that second and subsequent lines are indented and aligned with the first line. To create a bulleted list, do the following:
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Creating a numbered list | |
If you type a hash mark (#) at the beginning of a line, Tiki numbers the line and indents it from the left margin. The item's text is formatted with a hanging indent, so that second and subsequent lines are indented and aligned with the first line. To create a numbered list, do the following:
Did something go wrong? See Help!! (below) |
Creating a nested list | |
Here's a numbered list with nested levels:
* Level 1 (bulleted list)
# Level 1 (numbered list)
Tip You can create deeper levels of nesting, but doing so might prove confusing to your readers. Tip You can combine bulleted and numbered list items. Try it! |
Creating a definition list | |
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Monospaced (preformatted) text | |
Monospaced text can be used to show portions of code or text that need to be properly aligned by means of manually entered spacing. (This feature corresponds to HTML's element.) When you create monospaced text, Tiki uses a monospaced font (such as Courier) and does not automatically break lines. To create monospaced text, precede a line with one or more spaces. Note If you don't see the monospaced font, your administrator has disabled this option. |
Help! | |
Key Function and sub-features
Related Links
Typical Uses
A key quality of Web page usability is its scanability. Looking for information of interest, readers scan Web pages and quickly decide whether or not to move on. Because bulleted and numbered lists create interesting white space patterns and set off the listed material, they catch the reader's eye. Use bulleted and numbered lists liberally!
Points to remember:
Case Studies
Bugs
Support Requests
TikiTeam
Who is working here generally? Link UserPage.
UserPagebpfaffenberger
For more information
FeatureDoc
FeatureAdmin
FeatureDev |