• @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    Honestly I always preferred tabs for indentation and spaces for aligning. It doesn’t break anyone’s experience. And if somebody wants two spaces for a two-space-tab-width for indentation and other people prefer four. That will work just fine.

    I hate seeing 2 space indents. Unreadable AF ( to me ). At least this way I can easily work in the same codebase without somebody being annoyed ( except for the crying about the tabs )

    • @jadero
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      104 months ago

      Why not tabs for both indentation and alignment? (Actually, I see indentation as just a specific use of alignment.) Word processors have been doing it for decades (and typewriters for over a century!). Surely we can convince our code processors to use user-definable, fixed position tabs instead of relative position “tab = x spaces”.

      Keeping the [TAB] character in the file then allows everyone the layout they like.

      Or has working solo for 40 years fried my brain?

      • @[email protected]
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        74 months ago

        What I mean with tab = x spaces is only visually and not actually ( there will ( obviously) still be a tab character in my preference. Not sure if that was clear.

        Because alignment are fixed characters compared to indentation. For indentation the only question is how many characters the next indentation needs to be.

        For alignment it is not fixed. As an example of PHP code:

        function test(&obj) {
        $obj->doSomething()
        ....->doSomethingElse()
        }
        
        

        The dots would be spaces because in IDEs people generally use a font where every character is equally wide.

        If I would tab again instead of spaces it could work out if my tab length display is ( for one or more ) adds up to the width of the variable $obj. If somebody else has a tab width of 2 rather than somebody who has 3. It would only align for one of the two people.

        Does make sense? I typed it out after a gym session on my phone.

        Additionally. The whole problem is resolved by using spaces for both alignment and indentation. But in the cursor would still jump one space at a time rather than the whole tab ( although there are keyboard shortcuts for jumping words which would jump all of em.

        I don’t know. Call me old fashioned. I like what I like :/

        • @jadero
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          44 months ago

          If I correctly understand what you are saying, you are describing “relative” tabbing, where /t moves a constant distance from the current position. I prefer “stopped” tabs where /t moves to the next tab stop. If my /t doesn’t create the spacing/alignment I’m after, I just tab to the next position.

          Thus, I would set mine with the first tab position (for indenting) at 1.5 cm and subsequent tab stops at 3, 4, 5, … cm. That way I’d get perfect alignment with both fixed and proportional fonts.

          I’d also set line-wrap or line-continuation to use a hanging indent based on the start position of the line being wrapped or continued.

          I’d also set a boundary between code and comments so that lines always wrapped before the boundary and using the comment character at the end of a line would jump to the other side of the boundary with optional leaders (the characters, usually periods that connect the end/beginning of a gap). In an ideal world, I would be able to “hide code”, pulling all the inline comments into a “hanging indent” structure with their “parent” comments.

          Yes, before the advent of IDE editors and all the fancy intellisense stuff, I used word-processing software for coding. 😀

          • @[email protected]
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            54 months ago

            If I correctly understand what you are saying

            You did not, but he also picked an example that could be conflated with the 4-spaces issue.

            They’re talking about situations where you might want to align text by a number of spaces that isn’t divisible by your tab size. I’ll expand on their example:

            function test(&obj, &obj2, &a) {
            $obj->doSomething()
            ....->doSomethingElse()
            
            $obj2->doSomething()
            .....->doSomethingElse()
            
            $a->doSomething()
            ..->doSomethingElse()
            }
            

            Again, dots are “visible spaces” in this example, and being used to align chained methods with the length of the object name.

            • @jadero
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              4 months ago

              Edit: Bear with me while I sort out the difference between my display and the resulting code block. Ok, close enough.

              Ok, thanks. I would instead (and prefer to ) do something like this:

              function test(&obj, &obj2, &a) {
              $obj---->doSomething()
              ---->--->doSomethingElse()
              
              $obj2--->doSomething()
              ---->--->doSomethingElse()
              
              $a-->--->doSomething()
              ---->--->doSomethingElse()
              }
              

              In this case, the “>” are showing the tab stops and the “-” the resulting white space. Note how all the calls are lined up. (My preferred alignment style, not necessarily anyone else’s.)

              Yet another edit: I see that I missed addressing alignment on other than tab boundaries. To me, that’s just sinful! 😀

          • @[email protected]
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            4 months ago

            Correct. The way I’m used to it ( and how I thought the world worked ) is that the IDE gives tab a fixed length or characters. If you set it to 4 it would be the equivalent of 4 spaces or 4 letters or whatever.

            If my tab is set to 4 it would take up the width of 4 characters. If I need two indentations I would press tab twice.

            If bob then checks out my code and calls me a maniac and sociopath for using indentation and swears by “2”, the code would just look more condensed. The alignment would still work out because that’s done through spaces.

            var user_name = "Bob"
            var user_age[tab]= "Bob"
            

            This would align the = for Bob, because it needs two characters to align and that’s what his tab width is. It wouldn’t align for me because my tab width is 4. So I would.pur two spaces instead of the . That way it is aligned for everybody regardless of their tab width settings.

            The way you explain it sounds like how tabs works in MS Word ( or other word processors ).

            I don’t think I could work like that. I’ve only ever used IDEs to code ( regardless of how primitive they were back when I started). Interesting take though :D

            • @jadero
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              44 months ago

              The way you explain it sounds like how tabs works in MS Word ( or other word processors ).

              That is exactly how they work, and after 40 years, I still struggle with the whole “tab as a shortcut for spaces” thing. It’s not that I started with word processors, either, just that as soon I started working with them, everything got so much easier for me.

              There are some code-specific things that keep me from just going back to a word processor, but I think our code editors are missing some useful features that are found in word processors.

              • @[email protected]
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                24 months ago

                Generally I’m not very preoccupied with it as the IDE just formats it the way I like it on save :D.

        • @[email protected]
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          34 months ago

          The fact that you had to explain this is the reason why tabs are inferior in practice. People just don’t get it and then in collaborative projects you get a completely misaligned mess because not everyone has the same tab size.

    • @[email protected]
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      24 months ago

      Yeah, I understood the arguments against using tabs for alignment, but never really got the argument against using them for indentation.