For multi-level lists, as opposed to bulleted and numbered lists, you can set a different character (symbol, text or number) to display at each level of your list. Levels are normally considered to be subordinate to each other, where Level 1 (first level), Level 2 (second), Level 3 (third), etc. are of decreasing importance in the list. For example, the simple multi-level numbered passage of text opposite is arranged at three levels.
The flexibility of Affinity Publisher's multi-level bullet and numbering system means that you have full control over what gets displayed at each level. For this reason, no common numbering schema needs to exist between levels, i.e. the list could equally be prefixed with a different symbol, text prefix, or number combination at each level.
If you apply a multi-level preset to a range of text you'll get a list with the preset's Level 1 format applied by default. Unless you use text styles, you'll have to change to levels 2, 3, 4, etc. to set the correct level for your list entry.
The multi-level text style presets offer some simple but commonly used schemes for paragraph list formatting. However, if you want to create your own lists or modify an existing list (your own or one based on a preset), this can be done by tapping Expand next to the Text Styles menu and editing the text style via the Options menu.
If you're working on long publications, you may be using pre-assigned text styles (Heading 1, Heading 2, indent, etc.) to format your publication rather than using the above local formatting. You can use such text styles along with list styles to number headings or paragraphs automatically without the need to repetitively format headings or paragraphs as lists. As an example, headings and paragraphs in technical and legal publications are typically prefixed by numbers for easy reference. The advantage of using a style-driven approach is that you can let the numbering take care of itself while you concentrate on applying styling to your publication.
Affinity Publisher lets you easily associate any bulleted, numbered or multi-level list style (either preset or custom list) to an existing text style.