How can I prefix ordered list item numbers with a static string using CSS?
I want this HTML:
<ol style="list-style:decimal;">
<li>Apples</li>
开发者_如何学运维<li>Oranges</li>
</ol>
to render like this:
Q1. Apples
Q2. Oranges
Ie, I want to prefix "Q" to each number.
I've tried CSS like this:
ol li::before {
content: "Q";
}
but that renders like this:
1. QApples
2. QOranges
I've also tried using list-style: numbered inside;
, but that just shifts the list to the right with the same results. I can't find any way to reference the numbers in order to style them with CSS. This seems like such a simple, common scenario, yet I can't find any way to accomplish it with straightforward CSS (without CSS counters, JavaScript, etc).
The only pure CSS way is with counters:
ol {
counter-reset: item;
list-style-type: none;
}
ol li:before {
content: 'Q' counter(item, decimal) '. ';
counter-increment: item;
}
You cannot achieve this besides using CSS counters (which were designed specifically for such use cases!) or JavaScript.
By the way, it's decimal
, not numbered
.
There is a, fragile, non-counter method, but it's prone to breaking:
ol {
list-style-type: decimal;
margin: 0 0 0 2em;
}
li {
position: relative;
}
ol li:first-letter {
color: #f90;
float: left;
position: relative;
margin-left: -2em;
}
JS Fiddle demo.
Given this HTML:
<ol class="q">
<li>Apples</li>
<li>Oranges</li>
</ol>
you could (1) use the @counter-style
CSS at-rule:
@counter-style q {
system: extends decimal;
prefix: "Q";
}
ol.q {
list-style: q;
}
(See W3C: CSS Counter Styles Level 3: 3.1.7. Building from Existing Counter Styles: the extends system.) or (2) use CSS counters and the ::marker
CSS pseudo-element:
ol.q {
counter-reset: q;
}
ol.q > li {
counter-increment: q;
}
ol.q > li::marker {
content: "Q" counter(q) ". ";
}
Either way, you could set the list-style-position
CSS property via the list-style
CSS shorthand property to the value inside
in order to make the rendered HTML appear like that of BoltClock's answer.
HTML edits: I removed style="list-style:decimal;"
because I think that's the default for ol
elements. I added class="q"
so that the styling only applies to specific lists. I indented each li
element by two spaces because I prefer that style.
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