if, continuation and indentation
Jonathan Hartley
tartley at tartley.com
Fri May 28 06:48:59 EDT 2010
On 28/05/2010 11:34, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
> Jonathan Hartley wrote:
>> On May 27, 1:57 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant <jeanmic... at sequans.com>
>> wrote:
>>> HH wrote:
>>>> I have a question about best practices when it comes to line wrapping/
>>>> continuation and indentation, specifically in the case of an if
>>>> statement.
>>>> When I write an if statement with many conditions, I prefer
>>>> to use a
>>>> parenthesis around the whole block and get the implicit continuation,
>>>> rather than ending each line with an escape character. Thus, using
>>>> the example from the style guide (http://www.python.org/dev/peps/
>>>> pep-0008/) I would write:
>>>> if (width == 0 and
>>>> height == 0 and
>>>> color == 'red' and
>>>> emphasis == 'strong' or
>>>> highlight > 100):
>>>> raise ValueError("sorry, you lose")
>>>> The problem should be obvious -- it's not easy to see where the
>>>> conditional ends and the statement begins since they have the same
>>>> indentation. Part of the problem, I suppose, is that Emacs indents
>>>> 'height' and the other lines in the conditional to 4 spaces (because
>>>> of the parenthesis). How do people deal with this situation?
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Henrik
>>> One possible solution
>>>
>>> if (
>>> width == 0 and
>>> height == 0 and
>>> color == 'red' and
>>> emphasis == 'strong' or
>>> highlight > 100
>>> ):
>>> raise ValueError("sorry, you lose")
>>>
>>> JM
>>
>> I've always liked this, or even:
>>
>> if (
>> width == 0 and
>> height == 0 and
>> color == 'red' and
>> emphasis == 'strong' or
>> highlight > 100
>> ):
>> raise ValueError("sorry, you lose")
>>
>>
>> but my co-workers have uniformly gone bananas whenever I try it.
> I tried to give a layout that fits the OP way of doing, but I would
> not use what I described above, so I can understand why your co
> workers go bananas :)
>
> when it comes to extended conditions in if statement I prefer to write
> something like
>
> if self.haveLost():
> raise ValueError("sorry, you lose")
>
> It drastically improves the reading
Good point.
+1 for naming the condition, hooray for self-documenting code.
Sometime last year at my workplace, we started referring to comments as
'lies', we now always try to use techniques like this instead of comments.
--
Jonathan Hartley Made of meat. http://tartley.com
tartley at tartley.com +44 7737 062 225 twitter/skype: tartley
More information about the Python-list
mailing list