T2: Using standard text formatting conventions for lists | WAI | W3C Skip to content

Technique T2:Using standard text formatting conventions for lists

About this Technique

This technique relates to 1.3.1: Info and Relationships (Sufficient when used for making information and relationships conveyed through presentation programmatically determinable or available in text).

This technique applies to plain text documents. Not applicable to technologies that contain markup.

Description

The objective of this technique is to use text formatting conventions to create simple lists of related items. Hierarchical lists or nested lists cannot be represented using this technique and should be represented using a different technology.

A list is a sequence of list items. A list item is a paragraph that begins with a label. For unordered lists, asterisks, dashes, and bullet characters may be used as the label, but the same label characters must be used for all the items in a list. For ordered lists, the label may be alphabetic or numeric, and may be terminated by a period or a right parenthesis. The labels must be in ascending order, that is,

  • numbers must be in numeric order,
  • alphabetic labels must be in alphabetical order or in numeric order when interpreted as Roman numerals.

Examples

Example 1: Unordered list

						
- unordered list item
 
- unordered list item
 
- unordered list item

Example 2: Numeric ordered list

						
1. Ordered list item
 
2. Ordered list item
 
3. Ordered list item

Example 3: Roman numeral ordered list

						
i.   Ordered list item
 
ii.  Ordered list item
 
iii. Ordered list item
 
iv.  Ordered list item

Example 4: Alphabetic ordered list

						
A) Ordered list item
 
B) Ordered list item
 
C) Ordered list item

Tests

Procedure

For each list in the text content

  1. Check that each list item is a paragraph that starts with a label
  2. Check that the list contains no lines that are not list items
  3. Check that all list items in a list use the same style label
  4. Check that the labels in ordered lists are in sequential order
  5. Check that the labels in each unordered list are the same

Expected Results

  • All checks above are all true.
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