Who are the "spacists"?
Erik
python at lucidity.plus.com
Sun Mar 19 19:01:22 EDT 2017
On 19/03/17 22:29, Jon Ribbens wrote:
> On 2017-03-19, breamoreboy at gmail.com <breamoreboy at gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Sunday, March 19, 2017 at 9:54:52 PM UTC, Larry Hudson wrote:
>>> A trivial point (and irrelevant)... The thing I find annoying
>>> about an editor set to expand tabs to spaces is that it takes one
>>> keypress to indent but four (or whatever) to unindent.
>>
>> No, just about every editor that I've ever used has SHIFT-TAB set to
>> undo whatever TAB does.
>
> Not to mention plenty of editors (e.g. vim) will unindent when you
> press backspace.
I don't think that's strictly true. If you have just indented with a tab
character, then backspace will delete that tab character. But, if you
indent with either 4 spaces or use the Tab key with "expandtab" enabled,
then it will just delete the right-most space character.
The closest I've come to an "unindent" in vim so far is Ctrl-D, which
backs up one "shift width's" worth.
For sanity, in 'vim', I always use (for my own Python code, at least):
:set sw=4 ts=4 expandtabs
That way, all tab keypresses insert 4 spaces instead of a tab and the
shift operations ('<' and '>') will do the same. This also means the
"back up one shift-width" command (Ctrl-D) is the same as a "dedent".
If you also use the autoindent setting (:set ai), then writing code is
as easy as pressing enter and Tab to start a new suite, enter only to
continue a suite, and enter and Ctrl-D to drop back to the outer suite.
E.
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