The help text is wrong. It may or may not have been correct as of the time which it was written, but it's definitely wrong now. At this point, Stack Exchange uses CommonMark, which definitely doesn't work with a single fixed number of spaces required to indicate that the line is under the prior list item.
The CommonMark specification for List Items goes into considerable detail as to what's required for something to be considered "under" the current list item. The basics of what is says is:
The most important thing to notice is that the position of the text after the list marker determines how much indentation is needed in subsequent blocks in the list item. If the list marker takes up two spaces of indentation, and there are three spaces between the list marker and the next character other than a space or tab, then blocks must be indented five spaces in order to fall under the list item.
Effectively, you need to line the sub-items up in the character column where the text starts for the list item under which you want the item to be.
Unordered list example
So, for a simple unordered list:
- bullet item
- first sub-bullet item (needs 2 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* " is 2 characters)
- sub-sub-bullet item (needs 2 + 2 = 4 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* * " is 4 characters)
- second sub-bullet item (back to needs 2 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* " is 2 characters)
* bullet item
* first sub-bullet item (needs 2 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* " is 2 characters)
* sub-sub-bullet item (needs 2 + 2 = 4 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* * " is 4 characters)
* second sub-bullet item (back to needs 2 spaces at the beginning of the line; "* " is 2 characters)
Ordered list example
For an ordered list, the minimum number of spaces which you will need will depend on the numeric value for the line item. For example:
Lines under this line item, require 3 spaces, because "1. " is three characters.
This is another line under the first item.
Lines under this line item require 3 + 4 spaces = 7 spaces, because "1. 10. " is seven spaces.
This is another paragraph under line 10.
The above is:
1. Lines under this line item, require 3 spaces, because "1. " is three characters.
This is another line under the first item.
10. Lines under this line item require 3 + 4 spaces = 7 spaces, because "1. 10. " is seven spaces.
This is another paragraph under line 10.
That's the basics. Both fewer and more spaces will work under some conditions. The CommonMark ➞ HTML converter will try to do the "smart" thing, both in the preview during editing and in the backend. However, there are other types of formatting which are indicated by prepending spaces to the line (e.g. code formatting can be indicated by starting a line with 4 space characters, which can be combined with any level of list item). If you're not using the exactly specified number of spaces, then the converter may guess something which you're not intending. Given that the CommonMark ➞ HTML converter for the editor preview and the CommonMark ➞ HTML converter which is used in the backend for all posts are two different pieces of code, in two different languages, there will be some differences. You may need to try a few things to get it looking the way you want it.
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) between the items. Maybe this helps...