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I'm busy writing an online chat, and although it doesn't really matter which I use, since I can style them however I want with CSS, I'd quite like to use the best tag for messages.

My first thought was to use an <ol> since the messages are ordered by time. However, Facebook uses <ul>s and Google chat uses <div>s. Twitter does use <ol>.

So, which is semantically correct? And, which would be best for user with screen readers?

1 Answer 1

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div only. <ul><ol> are lists. Chat messages are not ordered list, it is obvious. If you dont need bullets/dots/other marker near each message - they are not unordered list too.

Also using div you dont need to reset default styles for lists = less CSS code you will write.

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  • Why are they not lists? I have a list of messages, don't I? (Un)ordered lists are not defined as using bullets/numbers, that is simply their default style. Try to separate display from semantics here. The change in the amount of CSS code is negligible
    – Swadq
    Apr 12, 2013 at 8:50
  • Formally they are lists too. But what is the point to use 'ul/ol' if you reset all default styles (remove list-style-type, remove default margin/padding)? Answers on stackoverflow are lists too, but list tag is not used. However twitter use '<ol>' for tweets. But i advise to use 'div' if you reset default styles and '<ol/ul>' if you just customise it.
    – korywka
    Apr 12, 2013 at 9:10
  • This confusion because the standard does gives definition for list. So for moot issues i prefer to use more convenience markup for me.
    – korywka
    Apr 12, 2013 at 9:16
  • Because <ol>/<ul> have semantic meaning, but <div> doesn't. I'm open to the idea of using <div>s, but you haven't presented a convincing argument
    – Swadq
    Apr 12, 2013 at 9:17

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