# `MD007` - Unordered list indentation Tags: `bullet`, `indentation`, `ul` Aliases: `ul-indent` Parameters: - `indent`: Spaces for indent (`integer`, default `2`) - `start_indent`: Spaces for first level indent (when start_indented is set) (`integer`, default `2`) - `start_indented`: Whether to indent the first level of the list (`boolean`, default `false`) Fixable: Some violations can be fixed by tooling This rule is triggered when list items are not indented by the configured number of spaces (default: 2). Example: ```markdown * List item * Nested list item indented by 3 spaces ``` Corrected Example: ```markdown * List item * Nested list item indented by 2 spaces ``` Note: This rule applies to a sublist only if its parent lists are all also unordered (otherwise, extra indentation of ordered lists interferes with the rule). The `start_indented` parameter allows the first level of lists to be indented by the configured number of spaces rather than starting at zero (the inverse of MD006). The `start_indent` parameter allows the first level of lists to be indented by a different number of spaces than the rest (ignored when `start_indented` is not set). Rationale: Indenting by 2 spaces allows the content of a nested list to be in line with the start of the content of the parent list when a single space is used after the list marker. Indenting by 4 spaces is consistent with code blocks and simpler for editors to implement. Additionally, this can be a compatibility issue for other Markdown parsers, which require 4-space indents. More information: [Markdown Style Guide][markdown-style-guide]. Note: See [Prettier.md](Prettier.md) for compatibility information. [markdown-style-guide]: https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#indentation-of-content-inside-lists