With the following HTML, what is the easiest method to display the list as two columns?
<ul>
<li>A</li>
<li>B</li>
<li>C</li>
<li>D</li>
<li>E</li>
</ul>
Desired display:
A B
C D
E
The solution needs to be able work on Internet Explorer.
Modern Browsers
leverage the css3 columns module to support what you are looking for.
http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css3_pr_columns.asp
CSS:
ul {
columns: 2;
-webkit-columns: 2;
-moz-columns: 2;
}
Legacy Browsers
Unfortunately for IE support you will need a code solution that involves JavaScript and dom manipulation. This means that anytime the contents of the list changes you will need to perform the operation for reordering the list into columns and reprinting. The solution below uses jQuery for brevity.
HTML:
<div>
<ul class="columns" data-columns="2">
<li>A</li>
<li>B</li>
<li>C</li>
<li>D</li>
<li>E</li>
<li>F</li>
<li>G</li>
</ul>
</div>
JavaScript:
(function($){
var initialContainer = $('.columns'),
columnItems = $('.columns li'),
columns = null,
column = 1; // account for initial column
function updateColumns(){
column = 0;
columnItems.each(function(idx, el){
if (idx !== 0 && idx > (columnItems.length / columns.length) + (column * idx)){
column += 1;
}
$(columns.get(column)).append(el);
});
}
function setupColumns(){
columnItems.detach();
while (column++ < initialContainer.data('columns')){
initialContainer.clone().insertBefore(initialContainer);
column++;
}
columns = $('.columns');
}
$(function(){
setupColumns();
updateColumns();
});
})(jQuery);
CSS:
.columns{
float: left;
position: relative;
margin-right: 20px;
}
EDIT:
As pointed out below this will order the columns as follows:
A E
B F
C G
D
while the OP asked for a variant matching the following:
A B
C D
E F
G
To accomplish the variant you simply change the code to the following:
function updateColumns(){
column = 0;
columnItems.each(function(idx, el){
if (column > columns.length){
column = 0;
}
$(columns.get(column)).append(el);
column += 1;
});
}
I was looking at @jaider's solution which worked but I'm offering a slightly different approach that I think is more easy to work with and which I've seen to be good across browsers.
ul{
list-style-type: disc;
-webkit-columns: 2;
-moz-columns: 2;
columns: 2;
list-style-position: inside;//this is important addition
}
By default un-ordered list display the bullet position outside but then in some browsers it would cause some display problems based on the browser's way of laying out your website.
To get it to display in the format:
A B
C D
E
etc. use the following:
ul li{
float: left;
width: 50%;//helps to determine number of columns, for instance 33.3% displays 3 columns
}
ul{
list-style-type: disc;
}
This should solve all your problems with displaying columns. All the best and thanks @jaider as your response helped to guide me to discover this.
I tried posting this as a comment, but couldn't get the columns to display right (as per your question).
You are asking for:
A B
C D
E
... but the answer accepted as the solution will return:
A D
B E
C
... so either the answer is incorrect or the question is.
A very simple solution would be to set the width of your <ul>
and then float and set the width of your <li>
items like so
<ul>
<li>A</li>
<li>B</li>
<li>C</li>
<li>D</li>
<li>E</li>
</ul>
ul{
width:210px;
}
li{
background:green;
float:left;
height:100px;
margin:0 10px 10px 0;
width:100px;
}
li:nth-child(even){
margin-right:0;
}
Example here http://jsfiddle.net/Jayx/Qbz9S/1/
If your question is wrong, then the previous answers apply (with a JS fix for lacking IE support).
I like the solution for modern browsers, but the bullets are missing, so I add it a little trick:
http://jsfiddle.net/HP85j/419/
ul {
list-style-type: none;
columns: 2;
-webkit-columns: 2;
-moz-columns: 2;
}
li:before {
content: "• ";
}

Here's a possible solution:
Snippet:
ul {
width: 760px;
margin-bottom: 20px;
overflow: hidden;
border-top: 1px solid #ccc;
}
li {
line-height: 1.5em;
border-bottom: 1px solid #ccc;
float: left;
display: inline;
}
#double li {
width: 50%;
}
<ul id="double">
<li>first</li>
<li>second</li>
<li>third</li>
<li>fourth</li>
</ul>
And it is done.
For 3 columns use li
width as 33%, for 4 columns use 25% and so on.
This is the simplest way to do it. CSS only.
- add width to the ul element.
- add display:inline-block and width of the new column (should be less than half of the ul width).
ul.list {
width: 300px;
}
ul.list li{
display:inline-block;
width: 100px;
}
<ul class="list">
<li>A</li>
<li>B</li>
<li>C</li>
<li>D</li>
<li>E</li>
</ul>
This can be achieved using column-count css property on parent div,
like
column-count:2;
check this out for more details.
You can use CSS only to set two columns or more
A E
B
C
D
<ul class="columns">
<li>A</li>
<li>B</li>
<li>C</li>
<li>D</li>
<li>E</li>
</ul>
ul.columns {
-webkit-columns: 60px 2;
-moz-columns: 60px 2;
columns: 60px 2;
-moz-column-fill: auto;
column-fill: auto;
}
You can do this really easily with the jQuery-Columns Plugin for example to split a ul with a class of .mylist you would do
$('.mylist').cols(2);
Here's a live example on jsfiddle
I like this better than with CSS because with the CSS solution not everything aligns vertically to the top.
more one answer after a few years!
in this article: http://csswizardry.com/2010/02/mutiple-column-lists-using-one-ul/
HTML:
<ul id="double"> <!-- Alter ID accordingly -->
<li>CSS</li>
<li>XHTML</li>
<li>Semantics</li>
<li>Accessibility</li>
<li>Usability</li>
<li>Web Standards</li>
<li>PHP</li>
<li>Typography</li>
<li>Grids</li>
<li>CSS3</li>
<li>HTML5</li>
<li>UI</li>
</ul>
CSS:
ul{
width:760px;
margin-bottom:20px;
overflow:hidden;
border-top:1px solid #ccc;
}
li{
line-height:1.5em;
border-bottom:1px solid #ccc;
float:left;
display:inline;
}
#double li { width:50%;}
#triple li { width:33.333%; }
#quad li { width:25%; }
#six li { width:16.666%; }
In updateColumns()
need if (column >= columns.length)
rather than if (column > columns.length)
to list all elements (C is skipped for example) so:
function updateColumns(){
column = 0;
columnItems.each(function(idx, el){
if (column >= columns.length){
column = 0;
}
console.log(column, el, idx);
$(columns.get(column)).append(el);
column += 1;
});
}
The legacy solution in the top answer didn't work for me because I wanted to affect multiple lists on the page and the answer assumes a single list plus it uses a fair bit of global state. In this case I wanted to alter every list inside a <section class="list-content">
:
const columns = 2;
$("section.list-content").each(function (index, element) {
let section = $(element);
let items = section.find("ul li").detach();
section.find("ul").detach();
for (let i = 0; i < columns; i++) {
section.append("<ul></ul>");
}
let lists = section.find("ul");
for (let i = 0; i < items.length; i++) {
lists.get(i % columns).append(items[i]);
}
});
With Bootstrap... This answer (https://stackoverflow.com/a/23005046/1128742) got me pointed towards this solution:
<ul class="list-unstyled row">
<li class="col-xs-6">Item 1</li>
<li class="col-xs-6">Item 2</li>
<li class="col-xs-6">Item 3</li>
</ul>
Thisd was a perfect solution for me, looking it for years:
http://css-tricks.com/forums/topic/two-column-unordered-list/
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14745297/how-to-display-an-unordered-list-in-two-columns