Please verify!!
Dave Angel
d at davea.name
Thu Feb 23 17:43:48 EST 2012
On 02/23/2012 05:13 PM, Manish Sharma wrote:
> Hi I am new to python language. On my first day, somebody told me that
> if any python script file is opened with any editor except python
> editor, the file is corrupted. Some spacing or indentation is changed
> and script stops working. I was opening the script file in Windows
> using Notepad++ but I didn't save anything and closed it. Still it was
> suggested to never open the python file in any other editor.
>
> Can anybody please verify this? Can opening a python script in any
> editor other than python editor corrupt the script? Did anybody ever
> face such type of issue or its just misunderstanding of the concept.
>
> I hope this group is the best place to ask this. Please reply !
>
> :)
> Manish
That is nonsense. I've used at least a dozen text editors, from Windows
Notepad to emacs on Linux. And since I know of no program called
"python editor," I'm sure none of them was that one.
Of course, there are editors that are broken, or can be configured to be
broken. I certainly wouldn't try wordpad, even in text mode. But a
good editor with a good configuration can be much nicer to use than Notepad.
First thing I'd do is to disable tab logic in the editor. When you
press the tab key, there's no excuse for an editor to actually put a tab
in the file. It should adjust the column by adding the appropriate
number of spaces. The main place you get in trouble is when a file has
tabs in some lines, and uses spaces for indenting on other lines. Since
tabs are not interpreted the same way in various utilities, it's just
better not to use them at all.
As Amirouche has pointed out, line endings can be inconsistent between
different operating systems, and not all editors can handle the
differences. But the python compiler/interpreter doesn't care about
which line ending is used.
One other issue could be files that have non-ASCII characters. Since a
text file has no standard way to indicate what format it uses (utf8,
ucs2, or dozens of "extended ASCII" encodings), another editor might not
deal with it correctly. There is a standard way to indicate to Python
how to interpret non-ascii characters, so if you either 1) always use
ASCII1 2) always use the same character encoding, or 3) have your editor
look for the declaration and honor it, you'd have no trouble.
If these problems do occur, they'll be pretty easy to spot. And you can
always revert to an earlier version, by using your revision control
system. Enabling one of those is about as important as choosing your
editor.
--
DaveA
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