CSS fallback Descriptor
The CSS fallback
descriptor is used with the @counter-style
at-rule to provide a fallback counter system when the current counter style can't be used.
The @counter-style
rule accepts a name, followed by a number of descriptors, which define the counter style. The fallback
descriptor allows you to specify a fallback counter system when the current counter style can’t create a representation for a given counter value.
Here's an example of using the fallback
descriptor.
If your browser supports the @counter-style
at-rule, the above code could result in a list that looks something like this:
Possible Values
The fallback
descriptor accepts the following values.
The counter-style-name is the name of a counter style (i.e. the counter style you want to use as the fallback style).
The initial value of the fallback
descriptor is decimal
. Therefore, if there's no counter style with the given name, the counter will use decimal
instead.
Official Specifications
The fallback
descriptor is defined in CSS Counter Styles Level 3 (W3C Candidate Recommendation, 11 June 2015).