# selector-class-pattern Specify a pattern for class selectors. ```css .foo, #bar.baz span, #hoo[disabled] { color: pink; } /** ↑ ↑ * These class selectors */ ``` This rule ignores non-outputting Less mixin definitions and called Less mixins. Escaped selectors (e.g. `.u-size-11\/12\@sm`) are parsed as escaped twice (e.g. `.u-size-11\\/12\\@sm`). Your RegExp should account for that. ## Options `regex|string` A string will be translated into a RegExp like so `new RegExp(yourString)` — so be sure to escape properly. The selector value _after `.`_ will be checked. No need to include `.` in your pattern. Given the string: ```js "foo-[a-z]+"; ``` The following patterns are considered violations: ```css .foop {} ``` ```css .foo-BAR {} ``` ```css div > #zing + .foo-BAR {} ``` The following patterns are _not_ considered violations: ```css .foo-bar {} ``` ```css div > #zing + .foo-bar {} ``` ```css #foop {} ``` ```css [foo='bar'] {} ``` ## Optional secondary options ### `resolveNestedSelectors: true | false` (default: `false`) This option will resolve nested selectors with `&` interpolation. For example, with `true`. Given the string: ``` "^[A-Z]+$" ``` The following patterns are considered violations: ```css .A { &__B {} /* resolved to ".A__B" */ } ``` The following patterns are _not_ considered violations: ```css .A { &B {} /* resolved to ".AB" */ } ```