• @[email protected]
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    59 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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      edit-2
      9 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! 😀