Hi, I think this is probably my fault. I'm using Textmate and I'm not very disciplined about using spaces instead of tabs :-( I'll try to stick to spaces in the future and hopefully figure out how to turn off the auto-indenting that it does.
Ethan On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 4:44 PM, Vassil Dichev <[email protected]> wrote: > I configured my editor (jEdit) to untabify according to the set tab > size, but I checked the results manually. This is not an easy task, I > know... > > There is a Scala formatter I've heard about recently, maybe it's time > for me to try it out: > > http://github.com/mdr/scalariform > > > On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Richard Hirsch <[email protected]> > wrote: > > How did you indent? Manually or with a tool? > > > > I've been experimenting with Scala Formatter in Eclipse but it doesn't > > always work correctly. > > > > D. > > > > On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 10:56 PM, Vassil Dichev <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> I just took the liberty of formatting a couple of files (API2, > >> API2Test and AuthToken) which looked just... wrong in my editor. The > >> reason was that some lines were indented using tabs, while the Scala > >> convention (used in the rest of the ESME files) uses 2 spaces for > >> indentation. > >> > >> We posted a Scala Style guide some time ago > >> (http://davetron5000.github.com/scala-style/), it would be really > >> helpful if we could stick to it! In order to do so, it is necessary > >> that our editors/IDEs are set up to respect this convention and not > >> apply formatting which might surprise others. > >> > >> Sorry for the nitpick, but documents with mixed tabs/spaces, while > >> they look perfectly OK on editors with the "correct" tab size, produce > >> horrendous results in editors with a different indentation setting. > >> > >> Vassil > >> > > >
