ɐɥO to [email protected] • 6 months agoI got SWAT'ed and handcuffed live while Linux development streaming!www.youtube.comexternal-linkmessage-square180fedilinkarrow-up1715arrow-down119
arrow-up1696arrow-down1external-linkI got SWAT'ed and handcuffed live while Linux development streaming!www.youtube.comɐɥO to [email protected] • 6 months agomessage-square180fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish16•6 months agoSo I have to use the same width as you? What if I want 3 spaces for a tab?
minus-squareKairoslinkfedilink4•edit-26 months agoI use tabs for indentation then spaces after that if I need to offset a line by a specific amount of chars, such as a multi-line output or something. Edit: to be specific: https://pastebin.com/un6iUmEp . Notice how line 3 has one tab, then several spaces before the first non-whitespace character.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink9•edit-26 months agoI like to use asterisk spacing. void main() { /****/for (int i=0; i <10; ++I) { /********/printf("hello world\n"); /********/printf("%d\n", i); /****/} }
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•6 months agoRespect. Only through destruction can we be purified.
How?
same width for all setups
So I have to use the same width as you? What if I want 3 spaces for a tab?
That makes it worse imo
I use tabs for indentation then spaces after that if I need to offset a line by a specific amount of chars, such as a multi-line output or something.
Edit: to be specific: https://pastebin.com/un6iUmEp . Notice how line 3 has one tab, then several spaces before the first non-whitespace character.
I like to use asterisk spacing.
void main() { /****/for (int i=0; i <10; ++I) { /********/printf("hello world\n"); /********/printf("%d\n", i); /****/} }
Respect. Only through destruction can we be purified.
That’s spaces but worse? Why do you do this?