Comment Re:Kinda Subjective but... (Score 1) 479
If your code style calls for spaces, do not insert a tab instead. It's annoying, and you break the indentation that everyone has agreed on.
If your code style calls for spaces, do not insert a tab instead. It's annoying, and you break the indentation that everyone has agreed on.
It's a standard, whether you like it, or know about it, or not.
If you think the only way anybody will ever view your code is in a "sane IDE", you are mistaken. Just because your current IDE can compensate for your bad formatting, that doesn't make your bad formatting a good practice.
I wonder how long you have been writing code, if you don't yet realize that sometimes aligning things vertically across several lines can increase clarity. If everybody gets to set their own indentation amounts (by changing tab width), then this benefit is lost. Tables were invented for a reason, and sometimes code is tabular. And if you think a tab character is how you get a table, you are sadly mistaken.
For example, having same-line comments start at column 60 (when possible) makes code easier to read. If you go changing the tab character to 4 spaces, that alignment is ruined.
Also a reason for not using proportional fonts.
Wow, I know a lot of AI researchers who are going to be pretty pissed off that these materials scientists scooped them.
Has it passed the Turing test yet?
Compare emacs with the shiny toys Jobs made and I think we see who comes out on top.
Way to cherry-pick facts to back up your bias. Compare GCC with the Lisa and see who comes out on top.
But now that I re-read your post, perhaps you were being ironic. Emacs was plainly more innovative than any of Apple's "shiny toys". Less popular, of course, but why would we nerds care about that?
For all of you logic-challenged commenters out there: saying bad things about RMS does not turn Jobs into a saint, no matter how much you wish it would.
Slashdot's icon for a bug is a picture of a beetle? I thought this was news for NERDS.
I'm so glad that other states are doing this kind of experiment on their children. Future generations will thank them for the empirical evidence.
What I can't figure out is how they got this past the IRB.
It isn't a robot, it's a waldo. It didn't wake, it was turned on.
I thought this was "news for nerds", not "puff for plebes".
This got +5 insightful?? I see nothing but opinions based on two fundamental misconceptions:
1) Editing C# in a GUI editor means you are "programming in a GUI"
2) CLI == vt100
Fast, cheap, good: pick two.