Lists
Use lists to present steps, groups, or sets of information. Number lists when the order is important, like when you’re describing steps of a process. Don’t use numbers when the list’s order doesn’t matter.
See the lists section of the Style Guide for additional guidance on using and formatting lists.
Unordered Lists (Nested)
- List item one
- List item one
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
Ordered List (Nested)
Ordered lists are available in two styles: a numbered list and a lettered list.
The numbered style (default):
- List item one
- List item one
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
The lettered (alphabetical) style:
- List item one
- List item one
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
- List item one
- List item two
- List item three
- List item four
Description Lists
Currently only supported in plain HTML.
The description list element presents a list of groups of terms (<dt>
) and descriptions (<dd>
). Common uses for this element are to provide a glossary, a definition list, or to display metadata (a list of key-value pairs).
A glossary/definition list:
- Beast of Bodmin
- A large feline inhabiting Bodmin Moor.
- Morgawr
- A sea serpent.
- Owlman
- A giant owl-like creature.
A list of metadata:
- Name
- Godzilla
- Born
- 1952
- Birthplace
- Japan
- Color
- Green
Source
These are WordPress-created core blocks that are built in to WordPress.