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Saturday 29 July 2017

CSS Counters


CSS counters are "variables" maintained by CSS whose values can be incremented by CSS rules (to track how many times they are used). Counters let you adjust the appearance of content based on its placement in the document.

Automatic Numbering With Counters
CSS counters are like "variables". The variable values can be incremented by CSS rules (which will track how many times they are used).

To work with CSS counters we will use the following properties:


  • counter-reset - Creates or resets a counter
  • counter-increment - Increments a counter value
  • content - Inserts generated content
  • counter() or counters() function - Adds the value of a counter to an element

To use a CSS counter, it must first be created with counter-reset.

The following example creates a counter for the page (in the body selector), then increments the counter value for each <h2> element and adds "Section <value of the counter>:" to the beginning of each <h2> element:

Example
body {
    counter-reset: section;
}
h2::before {
    counter-increment: section;
    content: "Section " counter(section) ": ";
}
Try it »

Nesting Counters

The following example creates one counter for the page (section) and one counter for each <h1> element (subsection). The "section" counter will be counted for each <h1> element with "Section <value of the section counter>.", and the "subsection" counter will be counted for each <h2> element with "<value of the section counter>.<value of the subsection counter>":

Example
body {
    counter-reset: section;
}
h1 {
    counter-reset: subsection;
}
h1::before {
    counter-increment: section;
    content: "Section " counter(section) ". ";
}
h2::before {
    counter-increment: subsection;
    content: counter(section) "." counter(subsection) " ";
}

Try it  »

A counter can also be useful to make outlined lists because a new instance of a counter is automatically created in child elements. Here we use the counters() function to insert a string between different levels of nested counters:

Example

ol {
    counter-reset: section;
    list-style-type: none;
}
li::before {
    counter-increment: section;
    content: counters(section,".") " ";
}
Try it »

CSS Counter Properties

content: Used with the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements, to insert generated content
counter-increment: Increments one or more counter values
counter-reset: Creates or resets one or more counters