On Sat, Oct 08, 2016 at 09:26:13PM +0200, Jelte Fennema wrote: > I have an idea to improve indenting guidelines for dictionaries for better > readability: If a value in a dictionary literal is placed on a new line, it > should have (or at least be allowed to have) a n additional hanging indent. > > Below is an example: > > mydict = {'mykey': > 'a very very very very very long value', > 'secondkey': 'a short value', > 'thirdkey': 'a very very very ' > 'long value that continues on the next line', > }
Looks good to me, except that my personal preference for the implicit string concatenation (thirdkey) is to move the space to the following line, and (if possible) align the parts: mydict = {'mykey': 'a very very very very very long value', 'secondkey': 'a short value', 'thirdkey': 'a very very very' ' long value that continues on the next line', } (And also align the closing brace with the opening brace.) Really long lines like thirdkey are ugly no matter what you do, but I find that the leading space stands out more than the trailing space, and makes it more obvious that something out of the ordinary is going on. Very few string literals start with a leading space, so when I see one, I know to look more closely. In your example, I find that I don't even notice the trailing space unless I read the string very carefully. -- Steve _______________________________________________ Python-ideas mailing list Python-ideas@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/