On Sat, Aug 11, 2007 at 03:11:11PM +0200, markus schnalke wrote: > Jeroen Schot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Sat, Aug 11, 2007 at 07:52:46AM -0500, Kurt H Maier wrote: > > > Two #include lines make a file "ugly"? How so? > > > > It's not about the number of lines, it's about the concept. When I add a > > layout (say 'gridmode') it will look: > > > > #include "tile.h" > > #include "float.h" > > #include "gridmode.h" > > #define LAYOUTS \ > > static Layout layout[] = { \ > > /* symbol function */ \ > > { "[]=", tile }, /* first entry is default */ \ > > { "><>", floating }, \ > > { "[#]", gridmode }, \ > > }; > > > > Looks pretty redundant/useless to me, which I find ugly :) > > I think that looks clear ... but there is redundance, yes.
Yes there is redundance, but I think it is not worse than before. Besides this, I can't think of a sane way how to build up the layout list otherwise... So I think let's live with it. Regards, -- Anselm R. Garbe >< http://www.suckless.org/ >< GPG key: 0D73F361