On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 9:27 AM, alex23 <wuwe...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 15/10/2014 12:23 PM, Juan Christian wrote: >> >> Using PyCharm is easy: >> >> File > Settings > (IDE Settings) Editor > Smart Keys > Reformat on paste >> > choose "Reformat Block" > > > > This isn't as straight forward as you imply. Say I have misindented code > like this: > > if True: > print 'true' > else: > print 'false' > print 'done' > > If I select this block in PyCharm and reformat it, I get: > > if True: > print 'true' > else: > print 'false' > print 'done' > > Which is still invalid. Even if it did work more fully, though, how would it > determine the correct placement of the last line of code? > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
It should parse this as else: print 'false' print 'done' Why? Because things like `print 'done'` usually have an empty line before it: if True: print 'true' else: print 'false' print 'done' That should be parsed the way you want it done. Makes perfect sense when you look at it. -- Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick <http://chriswarrick.com/> PGP: 5EAAEA16 stop html mail | always bottom-post | only UTF-8 makes sense -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list