• @calcopiritus
    link
    51 month ago

    Why have an async block spanning the whole function when you can mark the function as async? That’s 1 less level of indentation. Also, this quite is unusable for rust. A single match statement inside a function inside an impl is already 4 levels of indentation.

    • @RustyNova
      link
      41 month ago

      Those async blocks exist when doing async in traits.

      And I never said I respected the 4 level of indentations. That’s exactly the point of those rules. Keep it lowly indented but still readable

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      21 month ago

      A single match statement inside a function inside an impl is already 4 levels of indentation.

      How about this?

      The preferred way to ease multiple indentation levels in a switch statement is to align the switch and its subordinate case labels in the same column instead of double-indenting the case labels. E.g.:

      switch (suffix) {
      case 'G':
      case 'g':
              mem <<= 30;
              break;
      case 'M':
      case 'm':
              mem <<= 20;
              break;
      case 'K':
      case 'k':
              mem <<= 10;
              /* fall through */
      default:
              break;
      }
      

      I had some luck applying this to match statements. My example:

      
      let x = 5;
      
      match x {
      5 => foo(),
      3 => bar(),
      1 => match baz(x) {
      	Ok(_) => foo2(),
      	Err(e) => match maybe(e) {
      		Ok(_) => bar2(),
      		_ => panic!(),
      		}
      	}
      _ => panic!(),
      }
      
      

      Is this acceptable, at least compared to the original switch statement idea?

      • @RustyNova
        link
        31 month ago

        It’s a lot less readable imo. As well than a cargo fmt later and it’s gone (unless there’s a nightly setting for it)

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          11 month ago

          Formatters are off-topic for this, styles come first, formatters are developed later.

          My other reply:

          How about this one? it more closely mirrors the switch example:

          match suffix {
          'G' | 'g' => mem -= 30,
          'M' | 'm' => mem -= 20,
          'K' | 'k' => mem -= 10,
          _ => {},
          }
          

          How about this other one? it goes as far as cloning the switch example’s indentation:

          match suffix {
          'G' | 'g' => {
          	mem -= 30;
                 }
          'M' | 'm' => {
          	mem -= 20;
                 }
          'K' | 'k' => {
          	mem -= 10;
                 }
          _ => {},
          }
          
          • folkrav
            link
            fedilink
            41 month ago

            I mean, I use formatters everywhere I can exactly so I don’t have to think about code style. I’ll take a full code base that’s consistent in a style I dislike, over having another subjective debate about which style is prettier or easier to read, any day. So whatever cargo fmt spits out is exactly what I’ll prefer, regardless of what it looks like, if only for mere consistency.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        21 month ago

        i personally find this a lot less readable than the switch example. the case keywords at the start of the line quickly signify its meaning, unlike with => after the pattern. though i dont speak for everybody.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          How about this one? it more closely mirrors the switch example:

          match suffix {
          'G' | 'g' => mem -= 30,
          'M' | 'm' => mem -= 20,
          'K' | 'k' => mem -= 10,
          _ => {},
          }
          

          How about this other one? it goes as far as cloning the switch example’s indentation:

          match suffix {
          'G' | 'g' => {
          	mem -= 30;
                  }
          'M' | 'm' => {
          	mem -= 20;
                  }
          'K' | 'k' => {
          	mem -= 10;
                  }
          _ => {},
          }
          
          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            21 month ago

            the problem is that, while skimming the start of each lines, nothing about 'G' | 'g' tells me that its a branch. i need to spend more time parsing it. mind you, this may simply be a problem with rust’s syntax, not just ur formatting.

      • @calcopiritus
        link
        21 month ago

        Well, of course you can have few indent levels by just not indenting, I don’t think the readability loss is worth it though. If I had give up some indentation, I’d probably not indent the impl {} blocks.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          24 days ago

          I just got some idea yesterday regarding impl blocks, ready to be my respondent?

          I had a big impl block with 4 levels of indentation, so I cut the block, and replaced

          impl InputList {
              //snip
          }
          

          with mod impl_inputlist; and moved the impl block to a new file, and did not indent anything inside that block.

          The advantage this has over just not indenting the impl block in place, is that people will have difficulty distinguishing between what’s in the block and what’s outside, and that’s why the impl was moved to its own exclusive file, impl_inputlist.rs

          Maybe I am overstressing indentation. Ss there something wrong with my setup that prevents me from accepting 4-space indentation?

          I use:

          Editor: Neovide

          Font: “FiraCode Nerd Font Mono:h16” (16px fonts are addicintg)

          Monitor: 1366x768, 18.5 inch, 10+ years old, frankenstein-ly repaired Samsung monitor.

          Distance: I sit at about 40-60 Cm from my monitor.

          That leaves me with a 32x99 view of code excluding line numbers and such.