I apologize for submitting yet another go format "issue". I'm more so gauging the community on this idea. Furthermore, I ask that you understand I'm not sure if this type of code format has a proper name to it, I'm just calling it "newline-operator-chain" (in contrast to "operator-newline-chain").
...For the record the first time I saw this type of formatting was when I was using SQL Server Management Studio 2012. It had formatted its `select` statements in a similar way. Though I normally hate Microsoft's ways of doing things newline-operator chains look much cleaner. Enough talking, it's best I just show what I mean: operator-newline chain if Variable1 == true && Variable2 == 5 && MakeSureICan() { // ... } LotsOfArgs(myArg, anotherArg, bonusArg, thisArgToo()) newline-operator chain Much cleaner in my opinion. if Variable1 == true && Variable2 == 5 && MakeSureICan() { // ... } LotsOfArgs(myArg , anotherArg , bonusArg , thisArgToo()) Why Go format needs this *Looks cleaner, looks simpler* I believe that the newline-operator chain formatting looks niced due to the lining-up of the operators. This is nice to Go programmers like myself who are obsessed with readability. For instance, one could much understand the purpose of each argument in a faster manner when scanning through newline-operator chains as the operation is specified before the argument. Compared to operator-newline chains where the reader must look at 2 separate lines to fully understand the role an argument plays in the chain. *Makes more mathematical sense* And I think is more suitable for the underlining "mathematical" nature of operators in the first place. A good chunk of *any* programming is math, thus any language should share as many aspects with math as possible. Forcing operator-newline chain formatting disobeys this property. We'd see this in math: 2 + 4 + 9 - 1 ---- 14 not: 2 + 4 + 9 - 1 ---- 14 The latter (operator-newline) looks confusing and harder to follow, the readability is lacking. Which is why I think we need to allow the former (newline-operator) in Gofmt. In my opinion, I think Gofmt needs to *disallow* operator-newline to achieve the highest grade of readability. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/fa4525cb-289d-4fe3-9d91-c41b6e275c9e%40googlegroups.com.