> it's not a matter on "you must do it" but a matter of "you should do it": 
> indentation keeps the code more readable and it will be easier for you to 
> spot bugs. Once the code works you can either decide to squash everything 
> in the minimum number of lines possible or to keep it fully indented: it's 
> just a matter of personal taste. I prefer reading 1k line of 
> nicely-indented code than 200 of obscure 400-line long code that does the 
> exact same thing. Remember that as soon as the "development process" is 
> finished, you'll need to read the code more often than writing a brand new 
> large section (squash bugs, improve performances, add features, etc). Nice 
> indenting (and possibly lots of comments) makes code more "typo" resilient 
> and helps also other people looking at your code to understand what it 
> does.  
>

yes, i understand, thank you so much for your suggestion and explaination 
about indentation. 

-- 
Resources:
- http://web2py.com
- http://web2py.com/book (Documentation)
- http://github.com/web2py/web2py (Source code)
- https://code.google.com/p/web2py/issues/list (Report Issues)
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