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6.5: Lists

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    36659
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    Lists are useful because they emphasize selected information in regular text.

    Lists can be horizontal, with the listed items included directly in the sentence/paragraph. Lists can be vertical, such as when you see a list of three or four items strung out vertically on the page rather than in normal paragraph format. Lists–particularly vertical lists–are noticeable and readers are likely to pay more attention to them. Certain types of lists also make for easier reading. For example, in instructions, it is a big help for each step to be numbered and separate from the preceding and following steps. Lists also create more white space and spread out the text so that pages don’t seem like solid walls of words.

    Like headings, the various types of lists are an important feature of professional writing. They help readers understand, remember, and review key points. They help readers follow a sequence of actions or events. They also break up long stretches of straight text.

    General guidelines

    Use lists to highlight or emphasize text or to enumerate sequential items.

    Use a lead-in to introduce the list items and to indicate the meaning or purpose of the list.

    Make sure that each item in the list reads grammatically with the lead-in.

    Make list items parallel in phrasing.

    Avoid overusing lists because using too many lists destroys their effectiveness.

    Bullet points are democratic, meaning each item in a bulleted list is of equal importance. This is in contrast to numbered lists where items may have different levels of importance, priority, or sequence. Use bulleted lists for items that are in no required order. Use numbered lists for items that are in a required order (such as step-by-step instructions) or for items that must be referred to by item number.

    Horizontal lists

    Use a colon to introduce the list items only if a complete sentence precedes the list. Omit the colon if the lead-in is not a complete sentence.

    Incorrect: For this project, you need: tape, scissors, and white-out.

    Correct: For this project, you need tape, scissors, and white-out.

    Use both opening and closing parentheses on the list item numbers or letters: (a) item, (b) item, etc. (Don’t just use one parenthesis.) Use either regular numbers or lowercase letters within the parentheses, but use them consistently. (Do not punctuate either with periods.)

    Use lowercase for the text of in-sentence lists items, except when regular capitalization rules require caps.

    Punctuate the horizontal list items with commas if they are not complete sentences. Use semicolons if they are complete sentences.

    Incorrect: Follow these instructions to get to the store from your home: (1) drive south for three blocks, (2) turn right, (3) drive west for 6 blocks, (4) turn left, (5) drive for half a block, (6) turn right into the parking lot.

    Correct: Follow these instructions to get to the store from your home: (1) drive south for three blocks; (2) turn right; (3) drive west for 6 blocks; (4) turn left; (5) drive for half a block; (6) turn right into the parking lot.

    Use the same spacing for horizontal lists as in regular non-list text.

    Make the horizontal list occur at the end of the sentence. Never place a horizontal list introduced by a colon anywhere but at the end of the sentence!

    Incorrect: The following items: tape, scissors, and white-out are needed for this project.

    Correct: The following items are needed for this project: tape, scissors, and white-out.

    Vertical lists

    Introduce the list with a lead-in phrase or clause. Use a colon to introduce the list items only if the lead-in is a complete sentence. Omit the colon if the lead-in is an incomplete sentence.

    Avoid using headings as lead-ins for lists.

    Use consistent spacing, indentation, and punctuation.

    When a separate notice or explanatory paragraph follows a item, indent that separate material to the text of the parent list item, as illustrated in Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\).

    An example of a list showing how an additional note relating to one item in the list is indented to its parent.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) Indented material that elaborates on the parent list item

    Use the “hanging indent” format for list items two or more lines long.

    Use sentence-style capitalization on list items.

    Punctuate list items only if they are complete sentences that complete the sentence begun by the lead-in.

    When possible, omit articles (a, an, the) from the beginning of non-sentence list items.

    A word of caution

    If your list contains more than 6-8 items, you might consider consolidating list items or re-formatting your list. Lists with too many items can be overwhelming and challenging to read.

    Attribution

    This chapter contains material taken from “Bulleted and numbered lists” in Online Technical Writing Textbook by D. McMurray and is used under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.


    This page titled 6.5: Lists is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Melissa Ashman (KPUOpen) .

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