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-rw-r--r--.changeset/itchy-clouds-design.md5
-rw-r--r--packages/astro/src/@types/astro.ts8
2 files changed, 9 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/.changeset/itchy-clouds-design.md b/.changeset/itchy-clouds-design.md
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..b6d5046e3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.changeset/itchy-clouds-design.md
@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
+---
+'astro': patch
+---
+
+chore: correct description of `attribute` option in `scopedStyleStrategy`
diff --git a/packages/astro/src/@types/astro.ts b/packages/astro/src/@types/astro.ts
index 9a0cfd7ad..4210dd36d 100644
--- a/packages/astro/src/@types/astro.ts
+++ b/packages/astro/src/@types/astro.ts
@@ -618,12 +618,12 @@ export interface AstroUserConfig {
* @description
*
* Specify the strategy used for scoping styles within Astro components. Choose from:
- * - `'where'` - Use `:where` selectors, causing no specifity increase.
- * - `'class'` - Use class-based selectors, causing a +1 specifity increase.
- * - `'attribute'` - Use `data-` attributes, causing no specifity increase.
+ * - `'where'` - Use `:where` selectors, causing no specificity increase.
+ * - `'class'` - Use class-based selectors, causing a +1 specificity increase.
+ * - `'attribute'` - Use `data-` attributes, causing a +1 specificity increase.
*
* Using `'class'` is helpful when you want to ensure that element selectors within an Astro component override global style defaults (e.g. from a global stylesheet).
- * Using `'where'` gives you more control over specifity, but requires that you use higher-specifity selectors, layers, and other tools to control which selectors are applied.
+ * Using `'where'` gives you more control over specificity, but requires that you use higher-specificity selectors, layers, and other tools to control which selectors are applied.
* Using `'attribute'` is useful when you are manipulating the `class` attribute of elements and need to avoid conflicts between your own styling logic and Astro's application of styles.
*/
scopedStyleStrategy?: 'where' | 'class' | 'attribute';