\documentclass[final,letterpaper,twoside,12pt]{article}\begin{document}This is an example of \emph{list} environments.\section* {Common types of lists}%The asterisk in the above command means that the section will not be numberedThere are several types of lists, including:\begin{enumerate}\item ordered lists, like this one, where items have numbers or letters\item unordered lists, where individual items are ``bullet points''\end{enumerate}\noindent Lists are useful for several reasons:%with a lot of short paragraphs, you may not want them all indented, so you can%start with the command above\begin{itemize}\item They make documents well-organized\item Theyavoid users having to create numbers, etc. by hand.Note that an individual list item can cover several lines in a source document.\end{itemize}\noindent Lists can be \emph{nested} as well:\begin{itemize}\item An unordered list can contain\begin{enumerate}\item ordered lists\item unordered lists\end{enumerate}\item An ordered list can also contain\begin{itemize}\item ordered lists\item unordered lists\end{itemize}\end{itemize}\noindent To make the source file easier to read, we could rewrite the section above.\noindent Lists can be \emph{nested} as well:\begin{itemize}	\item An unordered list can contain		\begin{enumerate}			\item ordered lists			\item unordered lists		\end{enumerate}	\item An ordered list can also contain		\begin{itemize}			\item ordered lists			\item unordered lists		\end{itemize}	\item Counters (for numbered lists) or bullets (for itemized lists) will change		automatically as needed if lists are nested.\end{itemize}The latter method probably makes it easier to see where each listbegins and ends.\section* {Other lists}There is one other list environment, the \emph{description} environment,for sets of definitions. It works like this:\begin{description}	\item [42] The answer to life, the universe, and everything	\item [stuff] The technical term for many types of things	\item [everything] Lots of stuff\end{description}Note the extra parameter in the description environment. Also note how the alignmentis handled. If you want something like this aligned differently, you may want to use a \textbf{tabular} environment instead, as follows:\medskip %this skips a bit of vertical space\begin{tabular}{ll}	42 & The answer to life, the universe, and everything \\	stuff & The technical term for many types of things\\	everything & Lots of stuff\\\end{tabular}\medskip\noindent If you want the bold text like in the description environment, you can do this:\medskip %this skips a bit of vertical space\begin{tabular}{ll}	\textbf{42} & The answer to life, the universe, and everything \\	\textbf{stuff} & The technical term for many types of things\\	\textbf{everything} & Lots of stuff\\\end{tabular}\medskip\noindent You can also make your own list environments if you want.\end{document}