Configuration

The linter expects a configuration object. You can either craft your own config or extend an existing one.

Loading the configuration object

Finding and loading of your configuration object is done with cosmiconfig. Starting from the current working directory, it will look for the following possible sources, in this order:

  • a stylelint property in package.json
  • a .stylelintrc file
  • a stylelint.config.js file exporting a JS object

The .stylelintrc file (without extension) can be in JSON or YAML format. Alternately, you can add a filename extension to designate JSON, YAML, or JS format: .stylelintrc.json, .stylelintrc.yaml, .stylelintrc.yml, .stylelintrc.js. You may want to use an extension so that your text editor can better interpret the file, and help with syntax checking and highlighting.

Once one of these is found and parsed, the search will stop and that object will be used.

The configuration search can be short-circuited by using either the config or configFile options.

The configuration object

The configuration object can have the following properties.

rules

Rules determine what the linter looks for and complains about. There are over 170 built into stylelint. No rules are turned on by default, so this is where you turn on everything you want to check. All the rules must be explicitly configured as there are no default values.

The rules property is an object whose keys are rule names and values are rule configurations. Each rule configuration fits one of the following formats:

  • a single value (the primary option)
  • an array with two values ([primary option, secondary options])
  • null (to turn the rule off)
{
  "rules": {
    "block-no-empty": null,
    "color-no-invalid-hex": true,
    "comment-empty-line-before": [ "always", {
      "ignore": ["stylelint-commands", "after-comment"]
    } ],
    "declaration-colon-space-after": "always",
    "indentation": ["tab", {
      "except": ["value"]
    }],
    "max-empty-lines": 2,
    "rule-empty-line-before": [ "always", {
      "except": ["first-nested"],
      "ignore": ["after-comment"]
    } ],
    "unit-whitelist": ["em", "rem", "%", "s"]
  }
}

Specifying a primary option will turn a rule on. A complete list of primary rule options can be found in the example configuration.

To turn a rule off (when extending a configuration) you can set the value of the rule to null:

{
  "extends": "stylelint-config-standard",
  "rules": {
    "at-rule-empty-line-before": null
  }
}

Many rules have secondary options which provide further customization. To set secondary options, a two-member array is used:

"selector-pseudo-class-no-unknown": [true, {
  "ignorePseudoClasses": ["global"]
}]

Turning rules off from within your CSS

Rules can be temporarily turned off by using special comments in your CSS. For example, you can either turn all the rules off:

/* stylelint-disable */
a {}
/* stylelint-enable */

Or you can turn off individual rules:

/* stylelint-disable selector-no-id, declaration-no-important  */
#id {
  color: pink !important;
}
/* stylelint-enable */

You can turn off rules for individual lines only with a /* stylelint-disable-line */ comment, after which you do not need to explicitly re-enable them:

#id { /* stylelint-disable-line */
  color: pink !important; /* stylelint-disable-line declaration-no-important */
}

You can also turn off rules for the next line only with a /* stylelint-disable-next-line */ comment, after which you do not need to explicitly re-enable them:

#id {
  /* stylelint-disable-next-line declaration-no-important */
  color: pink !important;
}

Complex, overlapping disabling & enabling patterns are supported:

/* stylelint-disable */
/* stylelint-enable foo */
/* stylelint-disable foo */
/* stylelint-enable */
/* stylelint-disable foo, bar */
/* stylelint-disable baz */
/* stylelint-enable baz, bar */
/* stylelint-enable foo */

Caveat: Comments within selector and value lists are currently ignored.

Severities: error & warning

By default, all rules have an "error"-level severity. You can change this default by adding a defaultSeverity property to your configuration (see below).

To adjust any specific rule's severity, use the secondary option severity. The available values for severity are:

  • "warning"
  • "error"
// error-level severity examples
{ "indentation": 2 }
{ "indentation": [2] }

// warning-level severity examples
{ "indentation": [2, { "severity": "warning" } ] }
{ "indentation": [2, {
    "except": ["value"],
    "severity": "warning"
  }]
}

Different reporters may use these severity levels in different way, e.g. display them differently, or exit the process differently.

Custom Messages

If you want to deliver a custom message when a rule is violated, you can do so in two ways: provide a message option for the rule, or write a custom formatter.

All rules accept a message secondary option that, if provided, will be substituted for whatever standard message would be provided. For example, the following rule configuration would substitute in a couple of custom message:

{
  "color-hex-case": [ "lower", {
    "message": "Lowercase letters are easier to distinguish from numbers"
  } ],
  "indentation": [ 2, {
    "except": ["block"],
    "message": "Please use 2 spaces for indentation. Tabs make The Architect grumpy.",
    "severity": "warning"
  } ]
}

Writing a custom formatter gives you maximum control if you need serious customization.

extends

Your configuration can extend an existing configuration (whether your own or a third-party config). When one configuration extends another, it starts with the other‘s properties then adds to and overrides what’s there.

You can extend an array of existing configurations, with each item in the array taking precedence over the previous item (so the second item overrides rules in the first, the third item overrides rules in the first and the second, and so on, the last item overrides everything else).

For example, extending the stylelint-config-standard and then changing indentation to tabs and turning off the number-leading-zero rule:

{
  "extends": "stylelint-config-standard",
  "rules": {
    "indentation": "tab",
    "number-leading-zero": null
  }
}

Or starting with stylelint-config-standard, then layering myExtendableConfig on top of that, and then overriding the indentation rule:

{
  "extends": [
    "stylelint-config-standard",
    "./myExtendableConfig"
  ],
  "rules": {
    "indentation": "tab"
  }
}

The value of "extends" is a “locater” (or an array of “locaters”) that is ultimately require()d, so can fit whatever format works with Node's require.resolve() algorithm. That means a “locater” can be:

  • The name of a module in node_modules (e.g. stylelint-config-standard; that module's main file must be a valid JSON configuration)
  • An absolute path to a file (which makes sense if you're creating a JS object in a Node.js context and passing it in) with a .js or .json extension.
  • A relative path to a file with a .js or .json extension, relative to the referencing configuration (e.g. if configA has extends: "../configB", we'll look for configB relative to configA).

Because of extends, you can create and use shareable stylelint configurations. Use the stylelint-config keyword within your package.json if publishing your config to npm.

plugins

Plugins are rules or sets of rules built by the community that support methodologies, toolsets, non-standard CSS features, or very specific use cases.

To use one, add a "plugins" array to your config, containing “locaters” identifying the plugins you want to use. As with extends, above, a “locater” can be either an npm module name, an absolute path, or a path relative to the invoking configuration file.

Once the plugin is declared, within your "rules" object you'll need to add options for the plugin‘s rule(s), just like any standard rule. You will have to look at the plugin’s documentation to know what the rule name should be.

{
  "plugins": [
    "../special-rule.js"
  ],
  "rules": {
    "plugin/special-rule": "everything"
  }
}

A “plugin” can provide a single rule or a set of rules. If the plugin you use provides a set, just invoke the module in your "plugins" configuration value, and use the rules it provides in "rules". For example:

{
  "plugins": [
    "../some-rule-set.js"
  ],
  "rules": {
    "some-rule-set/first-rule": "everything",
    "some-rule-set/second-rule": "nothing",
    "some-rule-set/third-rule": "everything"
  }
}

processors

Processors are functions that hook into stylelint's pipeline, modifying code on its way into stylelint and modifying results on their way out.

Processors can only be used with the CLI and the Node.js API, not with the PostCSS plugin. (The PostCSS plugin will ignore them.)

Processors can enable stylelint to lint, but not autofix, the CSS within non-stylesheet files that aren't supported out-of-the-box by stylelint.

To use one, add a "processors" array to your config, containing “locaters” identifying the processors you want to use. As with extends, above, a “locater” can be either an npm module name, an absolute path, or a path relative to the invoking configuration file.

{
  "processors": ["stylelint-my-processor"],
  "rules": {..}
}

If your processor has options, make that item an array whose first item is the “locator” and second item is the options object.

{
  "processors": [
    "stylelint-my-processor",
    [ "some-other-processor", { "optionOne": true, "optionTwo": false } ]
  ],
  "rules": {..}
}

ignoreFiles

Provide a glob or array of globs to ignore specific files.

Note that this is not an efficient method for ignoring lots of files. If you want to ignore a lot of files efficiently, use .stylelintignore or adjust your files globs.

If the globs are absolute paths, they are used as is. If they are relative, they are analyzed relative to

  • configBasedir, if it's provided;
  • the config's filepath, if the config is a file that stylelint found a loaded;
  • or process.cwd().

By default, all node_modules and bower_components are ignored. Default values will be overridden if ignoreFiles is set.

The ignoreFiles property is stripped from extended configs: only the root-level config can ignore files.

defaultSeverity

The default severity level for all rules that do not have a severity specified in their secondary options. The available values for severity are:

  • "warning"
  • "error"

.stylelintignore

You can use a .stylelintignore file (or point to another ignore patterns file) to ignore specific files.

These files will be excluded from the files glob before the file system is check at all, so it is an efficient method for ignoring lots of files.

The patterns in your .stylelintignore file must match .gitignore syntax. (Behind the scenes, node-ignore parses your patterns.) One implication of this is that your patterns in .stylelintignore are always analyzed relative to process.cwd().

stylelint will look for a .stylelintignore file in process.cwd(). You can also specify a path to your ignore patterns file (absolute or relative to process.cwd()) using the --ignore-path (in the CLI) and ignorePath (in JS) options.