Scala considering significant indentation like Python
justin walters
walters.justin01 at gmail.com
Tue May 23 10:53:23 EDT 2017
On Tue, May 23, 2017 at 7:10 AM, Grant Edwards <grant.b.edwards at gmail.com>
wrote:
> On 2017-05-23, Michael Torrie <torriem at gmail.com> wrote:
> > On 05/22/2017 02:57 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
> >>> Kind of reminds me of LISP. Lots of closing parenths, and often then
> >>> just all get stuck together on a long. But I guess that's why they
> >>> invented paren matching shortcuts in editors. To make it easy to see
> if
> >>> you have them matched up. This works with braces too. Perhaps there
> is
> >>> a plugin for Vim to jump back and forth between the beginning and end
> of
> >>> a blog? Wouldn't be too hard to just look at indent.
> >
> > Sigh. Missing words, the wrong words! Block, not blog. agg.
> >
> >> It's built-in, no plug-in necessary.
> >>
> >> I still find white-space indentation easier to read, though. Is that
> > block 20 lines down inside or outside the above
> >> if/for/while? Just put your cursor on it and go straight down and
> > you'll find out. Not so easy if the braces aren't
> >> lined up (at least for me).
> >
> > True enough. Would still be nice to jump, though. Sometimes things get
> > longer than a page (like a class definition).
>
> A nice folding mode works nicely for that sort of thing. I normally
> use emacs, but it doesn't seem to have a folding mode built-in, and
> the add-on one's I've tried didn't seem to work in a very useful way.
> I like the folding in Scite, and sometimes I fire it up when I'm
> trying to figure out the logic/flow/looping in unfamiliar code.
>
I don't know how well it's received here, but I find that Pycharm is
fantastic for
doing stuff like this. It does have code folding, auto-complete, auto close
parens, etc.
My favorite feature, however, is the project structure view. It allows you
to view
your project as a tree of variables, classes, and functions instead of
filesystem
directories. It's pretty neat to be honest.
The downside, of course, is that Pycharm is a lot heavier than most
editors.
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