Carl J. Van Arsdall wrote: > The converse can also be said, "it's difficult to make sure everyone > uses spaces and not tabs". > > I think we've just about beat this discussion to death... nice work > everyone!
Yeah - we've got to the repeating ourselves stage. But that's the problem with this issue: it's really hard to get the space-indenters to actually think about it and to address what is being said. Every time it comes up, there's always a few people trying to explain why tabs give are a good idea, facing a whole raft of others spouting stuff like: 'mixing spaces and tabs is bad so use spaces only' 'tabs are x spaces and I like to use y spaces' 'tabs are bad end of story' and these non-arguments are repeated over and over within the same thread. At times it's like talking to a child - and not a bright one at that. Does it matter? Perhaps not if we can use tools which enable us to bridge the divide, like indent auto-detection in emacs and vim. I'm prepared to do that in cases where I have to work with an existing group of coders uasing spaces. But unfortunately the situation is worse than that: tab indentation needs to be actively defended. Most of the coding 'style guides' you'll find (including Python's) advocate spaces only. There are plenty of people who would like tabs removed from the language as an acceptable indentation method - look at the responses to Guido's April Fools blog entry last year. Unlikely perhaps. I hope so. It's a cruel irony that Python's creator didn't appreciate the benefits that tab indentation would bring to his own language - the only major language in which indentation levels actually have semantic significance. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list