Lists
Intro text.
Ordered Lists
			Ordered lists (with preceding numerals, for when the order matters) are built with the ol element.
			You do not need to add a specific class to ordered lists.
		
<ol> <li>Wake up</li> <li>Put on pants</li> <li>Leave house</li> </ol>
- Wake up
 - Put on pants
 - Leave house
 
Unordered Lists
			Unordered lists (where the order is not necessarily fixed) are built with the ul element and can
			be given a number of list icons to visually convey a meaning.
		
Available list types
			You can currently choose from bullet lists (list-bullet) and checklists (list-check).
		
<ul class="list-bullet"> <li>Peanut</li> <li>Butter</li> <li>Jelly</li> <li>Baseball bat</li> </ul>
- Peanut
 - Butter
 - Jelly
 - Baseball bat
 
<ul class="list-check"> <li>Brush teeth</li> <li>Have coffee</li> <li>Remember to put pants on</li> </ul>
- Brush teeth
 - Have coffee
 - Remember to put pants on
 
Spacing for List Elements
Often, list items should be spaced a bit more generously than block text. By default, list items follow each other directly, with only line height as a separator.
There are some shorthand classes that you can use to apply whitespace between all of a list's items without appending a margin class to each individual item.
			These shorthand classes are list-spacing-*, with “*” being “xs” through “xl”
			(e.g. list-spacing-s).
			All values correspond to the standard margin classes (i.e. list-spacing-xs
			has the same value as margin-bottom-xs).
		
<ul class="list-check list-spacing-xs"> <li>Peanut</li> <li>Butter</li> <li>Jelly</li> </ul>
- Peanut
 - Butter
 - Jelly
 
<ul class="list-check list-spacing"> <li>Base</li> <li>Ball</li> <li>Bat</li> </ul>
- Base
 - Ball
 - Bat