Home

Awesome

markdownlint

Markdown/CommonMark linting and style checking for Visual Studio Code

Introduction

The Markdown markup language is designed to be easy to read, write, and understand. It succeeds - and its flexibility is both a benefit and a drawback. Many styles are possible, so formatting can be inconsistent. Some constructs don't work well in all parsers and should be avoided. For example, here are some common/troublesome Markdown constructs.

markdownlint is an extension for the Visual Studio Code editor that includes a library of rules to encourage standards and consistency for Markdown files. It is powered by the markdownlint library for Node.js (which was inspired by markdownlint for Ruby). Linting is performed by the markdownlint-cli2 engine, which can be used in conjunction with this extension to provide command-line support for scripts and continuous integration scenarios. The markdownlint-cli2-action GitHub Action uses the same engine and can be integrated with project workflows.

Install

  1. Open Visual Studio Code
  2. Press Ctrl+P/Ctrl+P/⌘P to open the Quick Open dialog
  3. Type ext install markdownlint to find the extension
  4. Click the Install button, then the Enable button

OR

  1. Press Ctrl+Shift+X/Ctrl+Shift+X/⇧⌘X to open the Extensions tab
  2. Type markdownlint to find the extension
  3. Click the Install button, then the Enable button

OR

  1. Open a command-line prompt
  2. Run code --install-extension DavidAnson.vscode-markdownlint

Use

When editing a Markdown file in VS Code with markdownlint installed, any lines that violate one of markdownlint's rules (see below) will trigger a Warning in the editor. Warnings are indicated by a wavy green underline and can also be seen by pressing Ctrl+Shift+M/Ctrl+Shift+M/⇧⌘M to open the Errors and Warnings dialog. Hover the mouse pointer over a green line to see the warning or press F8 and Shift+F8/Shift+F8/⇧F8 to cycle through all the warnings (markdownlint warnings all begin with MD###). For more information about a markdownlint warning, place the cursor on a line and click the light bulb icon or press Ctrl+./Ctrl+./⌘. to open the quick fix dialog. Clicking one of the warnings in the dialog will display that rule's help entry in the default web browser.

For a tutorial, please see Build an Amazing Markdown Editor Using Visual Studio Code and Pandoc by Dave Johnson.

By default, markdownlint will scan and report issues for files that VS Code treats as Markdown. You can see what language mode the current file has in the Status Bar at the bottom of the window and you can change the language mode for the current file. If you have a custom file type that VS Code should always treat as Markdown, you can associate that file extension with the markdown language identifier.

Rules

See markdownlint's Rules.md file for more details.

The following rules can be automatically fixed by moving the cursor to a rule violation (wavy underlined text) and typing Ctrl+./Ctrl+./⌘. or clicking the light bulb icon.

Commands

Fix

All of a document's violations of the automatically-fixable rules above can be fixed for you.

markdownlint registers itself as a source code formatter for Markdown files and can be invoked by the Format Document/editor.action.formatDocument and Format Selection/editor.action.formatSelection commands, either from the Command Palette (via View|Command Palette... or Ctrl+Shift+P/Ctrl+Shift+P/⇧⌘P) or via the default key bindings of Shift+Alt+F/Ctrl+Shift+I/⇧⌥F (to format the document) and Ctrl+K Ctrl+F/Ctrl+K Ctrl+F/⌘K ⌘F (to format the selection). To automatically format when saving or pasting into a Markdown document, configure Visual Studio Code's editor.formatOnSave or editor.formatOnPaste settings like so:

"[markdown]": {
    "editor.formatOnSave": true,
    "editor.formatOnPaste": true
},

markdownlint also contributes the markdownlint.fixAll command which fixes a document's violations in one step and can be run from the Command Palette or by binding the command to a keyboard shortcut. To automatically fix violations when saving a Markdown document, configure Visual Studio Code's editor.codeActionsOnSave setting like so:

"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
    "source.fixAll.markdownlint": true
}

Automatically-applied fixes from either method can be reverted by Edit|Undo or Ctrl+Z/Ctrl+Z/⌘Z.

Workspace

To lint all Markdown files in the current workspace, run the markdownlint.lintWorkspace command (from the Command Palette or by binding it to a keyboard shortcut). This will use markdownlint-cli2, the same engine that powers the extension, to lint all files and output the results to a new terminal in the "Terminal" panel. Results will also appear in the "Problems" panel (Ctrl+Shift+M/Ctrl+Shift+M/⇧⌘M) because of the problem matcher included with the extension. Entries in the "Problems" panel can be clicked to open the corresponding file in the editor. To customize the files that are included/excluded when linting a workspace, configure the markdownlint.lintWorkspaceGlobs setting (see below) at workspace or user scope.

Disable

To temporarily disable linting of Markdown documents, run the markdownlint.toggleLinting command (from the Command Palette or by binding it to a keyboard shortcut). To re-enable linting, run the markdownlint.toggleLinting command again.

Note: The effects of the markdownlint.toggleLinting command are reset when a new workspace is opened; linting defaults to enabled.

Configure

markdownlint.config

By default (i.e., without customizing anything), all rules are enabled except MD013/line-length because many files include lines longer than the conventional 80 character limit:

{
    "MD013": false
}

Rules can be enabled, disabled, and customized by creating a JSON file named .markdownlint.jsonc/.markdownlint.json or a YAML file named .markdownlint.yaml/.markdownlint.yml or a JavaScript file named .markdownlint.cjs in any directory of a project. Additionally, options (which include rules and things like markdown-it plugins and other settings) can be configured by creating a JSON file named .markdownlint-cli2.jsonc or a YAML file named .markdownlint-cli2.yaml or a JavaScript file named .markdownlint-cli2.cjs in any directory of a project.

For more information about configuration file precedence and complete examples, see the Configuration section of the markdownlint-cli2 README.md.

A custom configuration is often defined by a .markdownlint.json file in the root of the project:

{
    "default": true,
    "MD003": { "style": "atx_closed" },
    "MD007": { "indent": 4 },
    "no-hard-tabs": false
}

To extend another configuration file, such a file can use the extends property to provide a relative path:

{
    "extends": "../.markdownlint.json",
    "no-hard-tabs": true
}

Files referenced via extends do not need to be part of the current project (but usually are).

Rules can also be configured using VS Code's support for user and workspace settings.

The above configuration might look like the following in VS Code's user settings file:

{
    "editor.someSetting": true,
    "markdownlint.config": {
        "default": true,
        "MD003": { "style": "atx_closed" },
        "MD007": { "indent": 4 },
        "no-hard-tabs": false
    }
}

When using extends:

Configuration sources have the following precedence (in decreasing order):

Configuration changes saved to any location take effect immediately. Files referenced via extends are not monitored for changes. Inherited configuration can be explicitly disabled (or re-enabled) in any configuration file.

When a workspace is open, running the markdownlint.openConfigFile command (from the Command Palette or by binding it to a keyboard shortcut) will open an editor for the .markdownlint-cli2.{jsonc,yaml,cjs} or .markdownlint.{jsonc,json,yaml,yml,cjs} configuration file in the root of the workspace. If none of these files exist, a new .markdownlint.json containing the default rule configuration will be opened in the editor in the "pending save" state.

Note: Because JavaScript is cached by VS Code after being loaded, edits to .markdownlint.cjs/.markdownlint-cli2.cjs require a restart of VS Code.

markdownlint.focusMode

By default, all linting issues are logged and highlighted as you type or edit a document. This includes "transient" issues like MD009/no-trailing-spaces such as when typing at the end of a line.

If you find this distracting, linting can be configured to ignore issues on the same line as the cursor. This looks like the following in VS Code's user settings:

{
    "editor.someSetting": true,
    "markdownlint.focusMode": true
}

To ignore issues on the N lines above and below the cursor, set focusMode to a positive integer representing the number of lines to ignore in each direction:

{
    "editor.someSetting": true,
    "markdownlint.focusMode": 2
}

The value of 2 in the example above will ignore issues on the line with the cursor, the 2 lines above it, and the 2 lines below it.

Note: This is an application-level setting and is only valid in user (not workspace) settings.

markdownlint.run

By default, linting is performed as you type or edit a document. Linting is fast and efficient and should not interfere with typical workflows.

If you find this distracting, linting can be configured to run only when the document is saved. This looks like the following in VS Code's user settings:

{
    "editor.someSetting": true,
    "markdownlint.run": "onSave"
}

Note: When configured to run onSave, the list of reported issues will become outdated while the document is edited and will update when the document is saved.

markdownlint.customRules

Custom rules can be specified in VS Code's user/workspace configuration to apply additional linting beyond the default set of rules. Custom rules are specified by the path to a JavaScript file or the name of or path to an npm package exporting one rule or an array of rules (examples of custom rules).

Paths are typically relative to the root of the current workspace and should begin with ./ to differentiate the relative path from a module identifier. Paths can be absolute and begin with /, though this is discouraged because it does not work reliably across different machines. If implementing custom rules in a workspace, consider committing the rule code under the .vscode directory where it will be separate from other workspace content and available to everyone who clones the repository. Paths of the form {extension}/path are relative to the base directory of the VS Code extension named extension (which must already be installed). This syntax allows custom rules to be included within another extension's package, though this is discouraged because it introduces a subtle dependency on the other extension.

An example of VS Code's workspace settings for custom rules might look like the following:

{
    "editor.someSetting": true,
    "markdownlint.customRules": [
        "./.vscode/my-custom-rule.js",
        "./.vscode/my-custom-rule-array.js",
        "./.vscode/npm-package-for-custom-rule",
        "/absolute/path/to/custom/rule.js",
        "{publisher.extension-name}/custom-rule.js",
        "{publisher.extension-name}/npm/rule/package"
    ]
}

For information about authoring custom rules, see the markdownlint documentation for custom rules.

Note: Custom rules can also be specified (in a portable way other tools will recognize) via the customRules property in .markdownlint-cli2.{jsonc,yaml,cjs}. In markdownlint-cli2 configuration files, the modulePaths property can be used in conjunction to specify one or more additional paths for resolving module references. This can be used to work around the VS Code limitation that globally-installed Node modules are unavailable by setting modulePaths to the location of the global module path (typically /usr/local/lib on macOS/Linux or ~/AppData/Roaming/npm on Windows).

markdownlint.lintWorkspaceGlobs

The standard globs used when linting a workspace should match VS Code's default concept of "Markdown files that matter":

[
    // Source: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/blob/main/extensions/markdown-basics/package.json
    "**/*.{md,mkd,mdwn,mdown,markdown,markdn,mdtxt,mdtext,workbook}",
    // Source: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/blob/main/src/vs/workbench/contrib/search/browser/search.contribution.ts
    "!**/node_modules",
    "!**/bower_components",
    // Additional exclusions
    "!**/.git"
]

This list can be customized at workspace or user scope to include and exclude additional files and directories. For more information about syntax, see the "Command Line" section of the markdownlint-cli2 documentation.

Suppress

Individual warnings can be suppressed with comments in the Markdown file itself:

<!-- markdownlint-disable MD037 -->
deliberate space * in * emphasis
<!-- markdownlint-enable MD037 -->

More information about inline suppressions can be found in the Configuration section of the markdownlint README.md.

Snippets

The following snippets are available when editing a Markdown document (press Ctrl+Space/Ctrl+Space/⌃Space for IntelliSense suggestions):

Security

Running JavaScript from custom rules, markdown-it plugins, or configuration files (such as .markdownlint.cjs/.markdownlint-cli2.cjs) could be a security risk, so VS Code's Workspace Trust setting is honored to block JavaScript for untrusted workspaces.

History

See CHANGELOG.md.