The system descriptor specifies the algorithm to be used for converting the integer value of a counter to a string representation. It is used in a @counter-style to define the behavior of the defined style.
If the algorithm specified in the system descriptor is unable to construct the representation, for a particular counter value, then that counter value's representation will be constructed using the fallback system provided.
| Related at-rule | @counter-style |
|---|---|
| Initial value | symbolic |
| Media | all |
| Computed value | as specified |
| Canonical order | the unique non-ambiguous order defined by the formal grammar |
Syntax
/* Keyword values */ system: cyclic; system: numeric; system: alphabetic; system: symbolic; system: additive; system: fixed; /* Combined values */ system: fixed 3; system: extends decimal;
-
cyclic - Cycles through the list of symbols provided. Once the end of the list of symbols is reached, it will loop back to the beginning and start over. This system is useful for simple bullet styles with just one symbol, or for styles having multiple symbols. At least one symbol must be specified in the
symbolsdescriptor, or the counter style is not valid. -
Examples
-
Example 1
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>
CSS
@counter-style fisheye { system: cyclic; symbols: ◉; suffix: " "; } .list { list-style: fisheye; } - The above counter style will render lists like this:
◉ One
◉ Two
◉ Three fixed- Defines a finite set of symbols are specified. Once the system has looped through all the specified symbols, it will fall back. This system is useful in cases where the counter values are finite. At least one symbol must be specified in the
symbolsdescriptor or the counter style is not valid. Also an optional<integer>can be specified after the the system, as the value of the first symbol. If this integer is omitted, value of the first integer is taken as1.
Example 2
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style circled-digits { system: fixed; symbols: ➀ ➁ ➂; suffix: ' '; } - The above counter style will render the list like this:
➀ One
➁ Two
➂ Three
4 Four
5 Five symbolic- Cycles through the provided list of symbols. On each successive pass through the cycle, the symbols used for the counter representation are doubled, tripled, and so on. For example, if the original symbols provided were "◽" and "◾", on each successive pass, they will become "◽◽" and "◾◾", "◽◽◽" and "◾◾◾" and so on. At least one symbol must be specified in the
symbolsdescriptor or the counter style is not valid. This counter system works for positive counter values only.
Example 3
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style abc { system: symbolic; symbols: a b c; suffix: ". "; } - The above counter style will render lists like this:
a. One
b. Two
c. Three
aa. Four
bb. Five
cc. Six
aaa. Seven alphabetic- Interprets the specified symbols as digits, to an alphabetic numbering system. If the characters
"a"to"z"are specified as symbols in a counter style, with thealphabeticsystem, then the first 26 counter representations will be"a","b"upto"z". Until this point, the behavior is the same as that of thesymbolicsystem, described above. However, after"z", it will continue as"aa","ab","ac"…
Thesymbolsdescriptor must contain at least two symbols or the counter style is not valid. The first counter symbol provided in thesymbolsdescriptor, is interpreted as1, the next as2, and so on. This system is also defined strictly over positive counter values.
Example 4
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style abc { system: alphabetic; symbols: a b c; suffix: ". "; } - The above counter style, will render lists like this:
a. One
b. Two
c. Three
aa. Four
ab. Five
ac. Six
ba. Seven numeric- Interprets the counter symbols as digits in a place-value numbering system. The numeric system is similar to the
alphabeticsystem, described above. The main difference is that in thealphabeticsystem, the first counter symbol given in thesymbolsdescriptor is interpreted as1, the next as2, and so on. However, in the numeric system, the first counter symbol is interpreted as 0, the next as1, then2, and so on.
At least two counter symbols must be specified in thesymbolsdescriptor or the counter style is not valid.
Example 5
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style abc { system: numeric; symbols: a b c; suffix: ". "; }The above counter style will render lists like this:
b. One
c. Two
ba. Three
bb. Four
bc. Five
ca. Six
cb. Seven
The first symbol provided in thesymbolsdescriptor is interpreted as0here.
As shown in the following example, if digits from0to9are specified as symbols, this counter style will render symbols same as the decimal counter style.Example 6
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style numbers { system: numeric; symbols: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9; suffix: ". "; }The above counter style will render the list like this:
1. One
2. Two
3. Three
4. Four
5. Five
6. Six
7. Seven
8. Eight
9. Nine
10. Ten additive- Used to represent "sign-value" numbering systems, such as Roman numerals, which rather than reuse digits in different positions to obtain different values, define additional digits for larger values. The value of a number in such a system can be found out by adding the digits in the number.
An additional descriptor calledadditive-symbolsmust be specified with at least one additive tuple, or else the counter style rule will not be valid. An additive tuple is similar to a composite counter symbol, which is made up of two parts: a normal counter symbol and a non-negative integer weight. The additive tuples must be specified in the descending order of their weights or the system is invalid.
Example 7
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style upper-roman { system: additive; range: 1 3999; additive-symbols: 1000 M, 900 CM, 500 D, 400 CD, 100 C, 90 XC, 50 L, 40 XL, 10 X, 9 IX, 5 V, 4 IV, 1 I; }This following
@counter-stylerule will render lists with Roman numerals for counter representations.Notice that a
rangeis specified in this example. This is because the above representation will produce correct Roman numerals only until the counter value of3999. Once outside of the range, the rest of the counter representations will be based on thedecimalstyle, which is the fall back. If you need to represent counter values as Roman numerals, you could use either one of the predefined counter styles,upper-romanorlower-roman, rather than recreating the rule yourself. extends- Allows authors to use the algorithm of another counter style, but alter its other aspects. If a counter style rule is using the
extendssystem, any unspecified descriptors, and their values will be taken from the extended counter style specified. If the specified counter style name in extends, is not a currently defined counter style name, it will instead extend from the decimal counter style.
It must not contain asymbolsoradditive-symbolsdescriptor, or else the counter style rule is invalid. If one more more counter styles defenitions form a cycle with their extends values, the browser will treat all the participating counter styles as extending from the decimal style.
Example 8
HTML
<ul class="list"> <li>One</li> <li>Two</li> <li>Three</li> <li>Four</li> <li>Five</li> </ul>CSS
@counter-style alpha-modified { system: extends lower-alpha; prefix: "("; suffix: ") "; } - The above counter style rule will use the algorithm, symbols, and other properties of the
lower-alphacounter style, but will remove the period ('.') after the counter representation, and enclose the characters in paranthesis; like(a),(b), etc.
Formal syntax
cyclic | numeric | alphabetic | symbolic | additive | [ fixed <integer>? ] | [ extends <counter-style-name> ]where
<counter-style-name> = <custom-ident>
Specifications
| Specification | Status | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| CSS Counter Styles Level 3 The definition of 'system' in that specification. |
Candidate Recommendation | Initial definition |
Browser compatibility
| Feature | Chrome | Firefox (Gecko) | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic support | No support | 33 (33) | No support | No support | No support |
| Feature | Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | IE Mobile | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic support | No support | 33 (33) | No support | No support | No support |
See also
list-style,list-style-image,list-style-positionsymbols(), the functional notation creating anonymous counter styles.