• @NightAuthor
      link
      English
      81 year ago

      Pressing tab and having the appropriate number of spaces added is objectively the only right answer.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        101 year ago

        But you can set a tab width instead so any developer editing the code can adjust the indentation width to his liking, without changing the actual files contents and having to worry about setting the editor up to insert the right amount of spaces.

    • xigoi
      link
      fedilink
      11 year ago

      Tabs could be a good idea if their default size in most environments (and often not configurable) wasn’t 8, which is terribly big.

        • xigoi
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago
          • Many terminal emulators (may or may not be configurable), including Termux for Android (not configurable)
          • GitHub (by default)
          • SourceHut (not configurable)
          • Vim/Neovim (by default)
          • HTML (by default, I think)

          Honestly, I can’t think of an environment that doesn’t have 8-space tabs by default.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            11 year ago

            Interesting…

            Every IDE and editor (gui and tui) I’ve used has always come preconfigured with a tab-size of 4.

            The only thing I’ve ever experienced having a tab-size of 8 was github, and I thought that was just a problem with a setting from github’s size that I quickly set back to 4.

            It seems that tui editors come with tab-sizes of 8 only when a config isn’t provided, and every environment I’ve used where I’ve used a tui editor has always come with sensible configs (for things like config location, language recognition for syntax highlighting, etc…) including a tab-size of 4.