86

Seems interchangable?

2
  • 3
    They really should have chosen different names, as when you are first learning about this it is confusing since a visual list is obviously going to be displayed in a certain order. They should have named it something like <bl> (for bullet list) and <nl> (for numbered list). Jan 23, 2015 at 2:34
  • Additional info to all the great answers below: ol has attributes such as reversed = reverses order, start = set a number and continue your list after a text, type= for a, i et cetera. Which are only possible because ol has an ordered index.
    – Dr4gon
    Jun 16, 2023 at 7:04

12 Answers 12

111

UL means "unordered list". OL means "ordered list".

UL gets you bullet points. OL gets you numbers.

Definitely not interchangable.

14
  • 20
    Well, technically you can change how the list appears with CSS (list-style). But yes, semanticaly, UL should be used for unordered data and OL for ordered.
    – jimr
    Jun 24, 2009 at 17:42
  • 16
    Of course the default display is a consideration! Not as important as the semantic meaning of a tag, perhaps, but who wants to spend their time changing OL's to have bullet points, and force every developer after you to figure out your bizarre display rules for standard tags? Pedant fail. Jun 24, 2009 at 18:19
  • 5
    @Ben Blank: It's not. That's what's semantically important. But if you use an ordered list for unordered data, then use CSS to make the ordered list act like an unordered list, you have failed, hard. That was my point. The semantics is what's important, even if CSS can modify the display. The semantics are what will be used for automated analysis, for example, not the CSS. You think Google is going to parse the CSS to find out if your ordered list is actually an unordered one? Ok, maybe the would, but that's Google. :)
    – Randolpho
    Jun 24, 2009 at 18:28
  • 2
    @Randolpho — Using "an ordered list for unordered data" is exactly what I'm arguing against. I don't disagree with your answer at all; y only problem is that it makes the numbers/bullets sound like the most important part. Perhaps the comment I left was unclear (and if so, I apologize), but I'm trying to argue in favor of semantics, here. :-)
    – Ben Blank
    Jun 24, 2009 at 18:31
  • 2
    @Ben Blank: My only objection was to the idea that the default display should have "no bearing" on your choice. It should not be the primary consideration, but to say that the default display doesn't even enter into the picture implies that you intend to contravene the default display in a way that could confuse later developers. Jun 24, 2009 at 18:59
70

In math terms (hey, why not?), an <ol> represents a sequence, whereas <ul> represents a set. Rearranging the items in an ordered list changes the list's meaning. Rearranging them in an unordered list does not.

This is a good rule-of-thumb for which type of list to use. If changing the order of the items makes the list incorrect, you want to use <ol>. If the order doesn't matter, use <ul>.

3
  • 8
    Sequence vs set is a fun metaphor, except that a mathematical set doesn't allow for repeats while an html unordered list does. </nitpick>
    – jtmoulia
    Sep 10, 2015 at 18:47
  • 1
    I think you meant "but" instead of "except". The fact that "a mathematical set doesn't allow for repeats while an html unordered list does", doesn't change the fact that "Sequence vs set is a fun metaphor". </grammar-nitpick> Sep 4, 2017 at 16:25
  • 2
    @jtmoulia See multiset.
    – Adám
    Feb 28, 2021 at 13:52
53

With <ol> the order of the data is important and will be displayed (by default) while with <ul>, order isn't as important. Example:

<p>Tomorrow I will</p>
<ol>
  <li>Wake up</li>
   <li>Have breakfast</li>
   <li>Go to sleep</li>
</ol>
<p>During breakfast, I will eat</p>
<ul>
    <li>Butter</li>
    <li>Eggs</li>
    <li>Bacon</li>
</ul>

28

One is ordered list (OL), it is for things that have a defined and distinct order. There is a reason behind why they are organized.

The other (UL) is unordered list, which is just a collection of things in no specified order. Their organization is trivial.

4
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    Yep. What the others don't mention is that the numbers or bullets are just the default formatting. The semantic meaning is the main thing. Jun 24, 2009 at 17:42
  • 1
    BTW,how to hide the bullets of UL by css?
    – omg
    Jun 24, 2009 at 17:44
  • 5
    There's a point where this argument breaks down, from a semantics perspective. While unordered lists represent a set, rather than a sequence, they implicitly have an "order" - the order in which the list items appear. They are not entirely unordered at all, and the developer - perhaps subconsciously - orders list items upon entry. Apr 18, 2010 at 20:03
  • 4
    Okay, the 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 comment upvote above for list-style: none; is a great example of community excellence if I've ever seen one.
    – Marc
    Feb 24, 2014 at 15:19
22

Haha, so many answers!

When HTML first came out, there were OL and UL, which, as all of the other posters have said, meant Ordered List and Unordered List.

The difference was easy. OLs displayed... a number next to them. Or a roman numeral, or a letter! You could even control whether it used capitalized symbols or lowercase! Cool!

ULs gave you bullets. 3 types of bullets, even - discs (hollow circles), squares (filled squares), circles (filled circles.)

There was no CSS. Beyond these attributes, there wasn't really a way to customize the list formats (and margins and indententations and everything else.) So, this distinction was important.

Nowadays, its all CSS. In fact, the w3 people want you to use styles rather than the html "type" attribute that you used to use. So, using UL vs OL doesn't really matter, if you are one of them newfangled CSS users.

CSS lets you change the bullet type, or opt to use an image, or change the margins/styles/indentations, or not even display a bullet at all.

Edit again: This answer isn't really meant to address the semantic merits of UL vs OL. But technically (you know, at the bits and bytes) the above outlines the differences in behavior.

1
  • 10
    The correct is to make the distinction because you don't know how the user will reach the information. Maybe his browser doesn't support CSS or he's using a screen reader, or whatever. Semantically they are not the same, so you have to distinguish them.
    – basaundi
    Jun 24, 2009 at 18:33
14

OL:

  1. List item 1
  2. List item 2

UL:

  • List item 1
  • List item 2

OL is ordered list, UL is unordered list

5
  • For OL,is the number possible to hide?
    – omg
    Jun 24, 2009 at 17:43
  • As mentioned in the other posts you can use css list-style: none; to hide it. Can also use list-style-type to mess with the look. If you're going to downvote leave a reason.
    – Zach
    Jun 24, 2009 at 17:57
  • Got it.And what if I want to set the margin between each UL element?
    – omg
    Jun 24, 2009 at 18:12
  • in a simple html page, css, margin-bottom on the li tag could do it
    – Zach
    Jun 24, 2009 at 18:31
  • By the way, the left margin on lists is actually a left padding in most browsers. Best to set margin:0; padding:0; if you want to remove it. Sep 16, 2009 at 12:06
9

As the question asks "when to use them", I thought appropriate to offer examples of when, I usually decide to use OL when I want a series of steps, and UL when I want to offer choices:

Ordered list

Here the steps are critical for the business case, we must do the steps in this order, therefore an ordered list is used.

Checkout stages on eCommerce, these steps will be in this order.

<ol>
    <li>shipping</li>
    <li>billing</li>
    <li>summary</li>
    <li>confirmation</li>
</ol>

Unordered list

A user may decide on the order they choose to interact with these choices

<ul>
    <li>Contact Us</li>
    <li>Newsletter Signup</li>
    <li>Terms</li>
    <li>Log out</li>
</ul>
7

I think it's a sematic issue, as the numbering/bullet points can be changed by CSS.

Ordered lists should be things like instructions, or any sequential information.

Unordered lists should be everything else.

0
4

Use OL when you're listing steps that need to be done in a certain order. Use UL when you're listing items in no particular order of importance.

3

ul means unorded list. It is for lists in whick it doesn't matter what order the list items are in.

ol means ordered list. It is for lists that are numbered or in some way show that they have a specific ordering.

By default ul gets you bullet pointed lists and ol numbered lists, although this can be edited in css.

2

ol = means ordered list. Use when you want to list and number things. ul = means unordered list. Use when you want to list but not number them.

I think OL should have been called NL = numbered list. Why? Because UL can also have an order but not be numbered.

1

In some cases (specifically used by Screen Readers for people with special needs) you may want to have ordered list but not have numbers associated with them due to visual design. Ex. when you've let's say instructions on a page to fill up a form and want screen readers to take advantage of ordered items in the instructions then it will be useful. For all visual purposes they can be made to look exactly the same through CSS. It's the (non-visual, but helpful to screen reader) semantics that are different and at times useful.

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