I had to look this up to verify that these are not only real styles, but there are/were some individuals had the gall to make other people consider these awful indentation styles. Of course it was only the C gods themselves to actually come up with something both readable and aesthetically pleasing.
All joking aside, I’d have to imagine some of these make more sense when applied to languages other than C. Even still, there is clearly one true winner in my book.
Every C-inspired language with curly braces (which is a lot of them) that I know uses some variation on K&R/Allman.
Golang straight up enforces the “K&R” style and doesn’t recognize a curly brace on a new line. I don’t know of a JSON prettifier that doesn’t use “K&R” style either.
Unless you mean that the Haskell/Lisp styles make more sense in Haskell/Lisp, which, yeah, obviously. Hopefully no-one actually writes C code like that.
I had to look this up to verify that these are not only real styles, but there are/were some individuals had the gall to make other people consider these awful indentation styles. Of course it was only the C gods themselves to actually come up with something both readable and aesthetically pleasing.
All joking aside, I’d have to imagine some of these make more sense when applied to languages other than C. Even still, there is clearly one true winner in my book.
Yes, I totally agree with you. There is no better style than Whitesmiths.
Every C-inspired language with curly braces (which is a lot of them) that I know uses some variation on K&R/Allman.
Golang straight up enforces the “K&R” style and doesn’t recognize a curly brace on a new line. I don’t know of a JSON prettifier that doesn’t use “K&R” style either.
Unless you mean that the Haskell/Lisp styles make more sense in Haskell/Lisp, which, yeah, obviously. Hopefully no-one actually writes C code like that.