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Is there a way (ideally easy) to make headings and sections autonumber in HTML/CSS? Perhaps a JS library?

Or is this something that is hard to do in HTML?

I'm looking at an application for a corporate wiki but we want to be able to use heading numbers like we always have in word processors.

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7 Answers

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See this other question if you're wondering how to do it in CSS, the answer might be what you are looking for. But titel has a good proposition too, depending how your HTML document is made.

// Edit:

It should be noted that, as Triptych said in another comment, this is of interest only if it's for an internal tool where you have control over which browsers are used and using CSS is worth it because modifying the HTML would be hard for example. Support of this CSS feature is limited.

It would of course be easy to use something like jQuery to do the increment also. Something like this untested snippet:

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('h1').each(function(index) {
    $(this).html((index + 1) + '. ' + $(this).html());
  });
});

Don't forget to include the jquery.js file in your document of course.

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jQuery it will have to be - the CSS counters idea looks nice but won't work since our IT group only supports IE7 and only plans to upgrade to IE8. FF, Safari, Opera, etc are frowned up (but users can install them). – Technical Bard Feb 12 at 0:47
Note that this approach will change the header. Using css will leave the header name without the number. – Stephen Feb 12 at 21:30
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<ol>
  <li>Heading 1</li>
  <li>Heading 2</li>
  <li>Heading 3</li>
</ol>
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Lists do it, why not other elements? http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/generate.html#scope

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vote up 7 vote down

Definitely possible using css counters - just make sure you watch out for browser compatibility...:

This will make h2 get 1., 2., h3 gets 1.1, 2.1, 2.2 etc...

{style}
   body{counter-reset: section}
   h2{counter-reset: sub-section}
   h3{counter-reset: composite}
   h4{counter-reset: detail}

   h2:before{
     counter-increment: section;
     content: counter(section) " ";
   }
   h3:before{
     counter-increment: sub-section;
     content: counter(section) "." counter(sub-section) " ";
   }
   h4:before{
     counter-increment: composite;
     content: counter(section) "." counter(sub-section) "." counter(composite) " ";
   }
   h5:before{
     counter-increment: detail;
     content: counter(section) "." counter(sub-section) "." counter(composite) "." counter(detail) " ";
   }
   {style}

As lpfavreau says, it's the same as another question I believe.

Also note that using css will not change the heading (e.g. selected text will give you the heading without the numbers). This may or may not be desirable. lpfavreau's (accepted) answer will give you the jquery code to modify the heading text.

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I sure hope the OP doesn't like his code working on more than two browsers. – Triptych Feb 11 at 4:12
"Two browsers" is a little harsh. Not supporting any version of IE, though is pretty much a show-stopper unless you have a very tightly-controlled target audience. – Ben Blank Feb 11 at 4:56
Has anybody heard of graceful degradation? In my site people with proper browsers will get some nice numbers. IE will only have headings. It's better than nobody having numbers at all, and I am not going to stuff around getting IE to work (presumably it will in IE8) – Stephen Feb 11 at 20:34
[comment edit/clarification] "not going to stuff around getting IE to work" + for something so trivial as this. It's an enhancement, not a necessity I believe. (I'm all for getting IE to work for important stuff) – Stephen Feb 12 at 21:29
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The simplest method would be Numbered Lists

<ol>
<li> Section
    <ol>
      <li>Nested one</li>
      <li>Nested two</li>
    </ol>
</li>
<li>Section</li>
<li>Section</li>
<li>Section</li>
<ol>

will be somthing like:

  1. Section
    I. Nested one
    II. Nested two
  2. Section
  3. Section
  4. Section
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vote up 0 vote down

It is possible to implement auto numbering using HTML itself using ordered lists, and nesting them if necessary. Below there is a link to a live example of this, example I found after a fast search on Google.

http://archive.corewebprogramming.com/Chapter2/Nested-Ordered-Lists.html

There is also an possibility to use Unordered Lists and CSS as shown in this example:

http://print.wordpress.com/2006/02/22/css-beautifully-numbered-lists/

Hope this helps, Constantin TOVISI

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Could possibly be done either serverside or with JavaScript. Don't know about any premade scripts that does it though.

Impossible to do with HTML/CSS, at least - unless you manually add all numbers into your headings.

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It's not impossible with CSS. CSS does this by default with lists. Why would other elements be any different? – sebnow Feb 11 at 6:22
Because it's not semantically correct to mark up an entire, large document as an ordered list. Plus, in large documents you'd probably want the sections to be called 1, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 etc. which you cannot achieve with OLs. – Arve Systad Feb 11 at 9:53

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