• kevincox@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I think you have it backwards. If you use tabs for indentation and spaces for alignment it works great for any tab size.

    It is when you use a tab just as a compressed representation of 8 spaces and use them for alignment as well that it goes to shit. (because you have made the sin of tab == 8 spaces instead of the correct tab = 1 indent level)

    • exscape@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      How does that work, and with which editor settings? If you simply set the tab width (tabstop) in vim, things go south.

      Say you have a function definition one indent level in, then 22 characters of text. You more want to align the next line to that. How does that work in practice with tabs?

      The obvious way with tabs and ts=4 would be 6 tabs and two spaces(one tab for the initial indent, the rest to match 22 characters). But then someone with ts=2 comes along and barely gets half way there, or someone with ts=8 who overshoots by a lot.

      • kevincox@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Setting tabstop and shiftwidth differently is basically legacy braindead behaviour. It is going back to the logic of tab is just a way to compress spaces. If you are doing that then you have all of the problems of both tabs and spaces.

        As for alignment the easy answer is don’t use tabs for alignment. Use tabs for indentation, if you want to align something use spaces for the alignment past the indentation. Lemmy seems to be breaking code snippets right now but I have a really old blog post about this.

        https://kevincox.ca/2014/06/26/responsive-tabs/

        The post is a little out of date when referencing the style of my blog but the C example shows alignment. If you can resize the browser you can see that the indention changes from 4 to 2 as the screen gets narrower without breaking the alignment.