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- # Options
-
- Options shared by the:
-
- - [CLI](cli.md)
- - [Node.js API](node-api.md)
- - [PostCSS plugin](postcss-plugin.md)
-
- ## `configFile`
-
- CLI flag: `--config`
-
- Path to a JSON, YAML, or JS file that contains your [configuration object](../configure.md).
-
- Use this option if you don't want stylelint to search for a configuration file.
-
- The path should be either absolute or relative to the directory that your process is running from (`process.cwd()`).
-
- ## `configBasedir`
-
- CLI flag: `--config-basedir`
-
- Absolute path to the directory that relative paths defining "extends" and "plugins" are _relative to_. Only necessary if these values are relative paths.
-
- ## `fix`
-
- CLI flag: `--fix`
-
- Automatically fix, where possible, violations reported by rules.
-
- For CSS with standard syntax, stylelint uses [postcss-safe-parser](https://github.com/postcss/postcss-safe-parser) to fix syntax errors.
-
- If a source contains a:
-
- - scoped disable comment, e.g. `/* stylelint-disable indentation */`, any violations reported by the scoped rules will not be automatically fixed anywhere in the source
- - unscoped disable comment, i.e. `/* stylelint-disable */`, the entirety of source will not be automatically fixed
-
- This limitation in being tracked in [issue #2643](https://github.com/stylelint/stylelint/issues/2643).
-
- ## `formatter`
-
- CLI flags: `--formatter, -f` | `--custom-formatter`
-
- Specify the formatter to format your results.
-
- Options are:
-
- - `compact`
- - `json` (default for Node API)
- - `string` (default for CLI)
- - `tap`
- - `unix`
- - `verbose`
-
- The `formatter` Node.js API option can also accept a function, whereas the `--custom-formatter` CLI flag accepts a path to a JS file exporting one. The function in both cases must fit the signature described in the [Developer Guide](../../developer-guide/formatters.md).
-
- ## `cache`
-
- CLI flag: `--cache`
-
- Store the results of processed files so that stylelint only operates on the changed ones. By default, the cache is stored in `./.stylelintcache` in `process.cwd()`.
-
- Enabling this option can dramatically improve stylelint's speed because only changed files are linted.
-
- _If you run stylelint with `cache` and then run stylelint without `cache`, stylelint deletes the `.stylelintcache` because we have to assume that that second command invalidated `.stylelintcache`._
-
- ## `cacheLocation`
-
- CLI flag: `--cache-location`
-
- Path to a file or directory for the cache location.
-
- If a directory is specified, stylelint creates a cache file inside the specified folder. The name of the file is based on the hash of `process.cwd()` (e.g. `.cache_hashOfCWD`) so that stylelint can reuse a single location for a variety of caches from different projects.
-
- _If the directory of `cacheLocation` does not exist, make sure you add a trailing `/` on \*nix systems or `\` on Windows. Otherwise, stylelint assumes the path to be a file._
-
- ## `maxWarnings`
-
- CLI flags: `--max-warnings, --mw`
-
- Set a limit to the number of warnings accepted.
-
- It is useful when setting [`defaultSeverity`](../configure.md#defaultseverity) to `"warning"` and expecting the process to fail on warnings (e.g. CI build).
-
- If the number of warnings exceeds this value, the:
-
- - CLI process exits with code `2`
- - Node.js API adds a [`maxWarningsExceeded`](node-api.md#maxwarningsexceeded) property to the returned data
-
- ## `syntax`
-
- CLI flags: `--syntax, -s`
-
- Specify a syntax. Options:
-
- - `css`
- - `css-in-js`
- - `html`
- - `less`
- - `markdown`
- - `sass`
- - `scss`
- - `sugarss`
-
- If you do not specify a syntax, stylelint will automatically infer the syntaxes.
-
- Only use this option if you want to force a specific syntax.
-
- ## `customSyntax`
-
- CLI flag: `--custom-syntax`
-
- Specify a custom syntax to use on your code. Use this option if you want to force a specific syntax that's not already built into stylelint.
-
- This option should be a string that resolves to a JS module that exports a [PostCSS-compatible syntax](https://github.com/postcss/postcss#syntaxes). The string can be a module name (like `my-module`) or a path to a JS file (like `path/to/my-module.js`).
-
- Using the Node.js API, the `customSyntax` option can also accept a [Syntax object](https://github.com/postcss/postcss/blob/abfaa7122a0f480bc5be0905df3c24a6a51a82d9/lib/postcss.d.ts#L223-L232). Stylelint treats the `parse` property as a required value.
-
- Note that stylelint can provide no guarantee that core rules work with syntaxes other than the defaults listed for the `syntax` option above.
-
- ## `disableDefaultIgnores`
-
- CLI flags: `--disable-default-ignores, --di`
-
- Disable the default ignores. stylelint will not automatically ignore the contents of `node_modules`.
-
- ## `ignorePath`
-
- CLI flags: `--ignore-path, -i`
-
- A path to a file containing patterns describing files to ignore. The path can be absolute or relative to `process.cwd()`. By default, stylelint looks for `.stylelintignore` in `process.cwd()`.
-
- ## `ignoreDisables`
-
- CLI flags: `--ignore-disables, --id`
-
- Ignore `styleline-disable` (e.g. `/* stylelint-disable block-no-empty */`) comments.
-
- You can use this option to see what your linting results would be like without those exceptions.
-
- ## `reportNeedlessDisables`
-
- CLI flags: `--report-needless-disables, --rd`
-
- Produce a report to clean up your codebase, keeping only the `stylelint-disable` comments that serve a purpose.
-
- If needless disables are found, the:
-
- - CLI process exits with code `2`
- - Node.js API adds errors to the returned data
-
- ## `reportInvalidScopeDisables`
-
- CLI flags: `--report-invalid-scope-disables, --risd`
-
- Produce a report of the `stylelint-disable` comments that used for rules that don't exist within the configuration object.
-
- If invalid scope disables are found, the:
-
- - CLI process exits with code `2`
- - Node.js API adds errors to the returned data
-
- ## `reportDescriptionlessDisables`
-
- CLI flags: `--report-descriptionless-disables, --rdd`
-
- Produce a report of the `stylelint-disable` comments without a description.
-
- For example, when the configuration `{ block-no-empty: true }` is given, the following patterns are reported:
-
- <!-- prettier-ignore -->
- ```css
- /* stylelint-disable */
- a {}
- ```
-
- <!-- prettier-ignore -->
- ```css
- /* stylelint-disable-next-line block-no-empty */
- a {}
- ```
-
- But, the following patterns (`stylelint-disable -- <description>`) are _not_ reported:
-
- <!-- prettier-ignore -->
- ```css
- /* stylelint-disable -- This violation is ignorable. */
- a {}
- ```
-
- <!-- prettier-ignore -->
- ```css
- /* stylelint-disable-next-line block-no-empty -- This violation is ignorable. */
- a {}
- ```
-
- If descriptionless disables are found, the:
-
- - CLI process exits with code `2`
- - Node.js API adds errors to the returned data
-
- ## `codeFilename`
-
- CLI flag: `--stdin-filename`
-
- A filename to assign the input.
-
- If using `code` or `stdin` to pass a source string directly, you can use `codeFilename` to associate that code with a particular filename.
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