On 4/29/2014 1:05 PM, Brian Rogoff wrote:

The argument is roughly like this: if we accept that it would be a good
thing if there was a universal indentation/code formatting standard that
everyone followed (like gofmt for Go) then punctuation is redundant and
the remaining question is whether the added punctuation helps or hinders
readability on the whole. I'm guessing you find the lack of punctuation
to hinder readability. I find that the opposite is true, and so enjoy
reading such code more.


The problem with the "standardized indentation" argument is that it's *impossible* for a language like python to enforce indentation rules. All it can do, and indeed all is *does* do, is blindly assume that the indentation as presented is correct and adheres to the universal style. If something is indented wrong, there is no enforcement, only bugs.

So there's definitely more to it than just whether a person finds non-whitespace syntax to help/hinder readability.

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