Important Notice
The pages on this site contain documentation for very old MS-DOS software,
purely for historical purposes.
If you're looking for up-to-date documentation, particularly for programming,
you should not rely on the information found here, as it will be woefully
out of date.
lp.
◄Up► ◄Next► ◄Previous►
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
<lp>
The lp tag starts a list paragraph in an ordered, unordered, or simple list.
The tag is used whenever a list item consists of two or more paragraphs. For
two-column lists, the tag applies to text in the right column. The tag
breaks the current line, skips a line, then continues subsequent text on the
next line. The lp tag may be used only in conjunction with lists created
using the ol, ul, and sl tags.
This tag does not use parameters.
Example
This example uses the lp tag to start a list paragraph in an ordered list:
To remove a disk
<ol>
<li>Open drive door.
<lp>Depending on the drive, you may need to press
a button or turn a lever.
<li>Remove disk.
<li>Put disk in safe place.
</ol>
When displayed, the ordered list looks like this:
To remove a disk
1. Open drive door.
Depending on the drive, you may need to press
a button or turn a lever.
2. Remove disk.
3. Put disk in safe place.
See Also
ol, sl, ul
♦