Romain Francoise wrote:
Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
emacs21 correctly preserves the tab, while emacs-snapshot converts it
to spaces.
There is no tab in the initial file, so a more accurate way to put it is
emacs21 inserts a tab, and emacs-snapshot inserts spaces. Whether or
not
On Fri, Aug 04, 2006 at 11:21:00PM +0200, Romain Francoise wrote:
Hi Adrian,
Hi Romain,
Thanks for the report.
Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Please look at the three attachments:
- test-before: initial file
- test-after-{emacs21,snapshot}: pressed tab in the depends line
On Sat, Aug 05, 2006 at 10:16:26AM +0200, Sven Joachim wrote:
Romain Francoise wrote:
Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
emacs21 correctly preserves the tab, while emacs-snapshot converts it
to spaces.
There is no tab in the initial file, so a more accurate way to put it is
emacs21
Sven Joachim [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
That being said, I agree that it would be better if
indent-for-tab-command would indent with a tab rather than with spaces
in fundamental mode; unfortunately, there is apparently no option to
enable this.
Uh?
No, as noted in my initial message it's
Hi Adrian,
Thanks for the report.
Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Please look at the three attachments:
- test-before: initial file
- test-after-{emacs21,snapshot}: pressed tab in the depends line
You mean at the beginning of the line (column 0)?
This is using the fundamental mode
Package: emacs-snapshot
Version: 1:20060730-1
Severity: normal
Please look at the three attachments:
- test-before: initial file
- test-after-{emacs21,snapshot}: pressed tab in the depends line
This is using the fundamental mode with both Emacs versions.
emacs21 correctly preserves the tab,
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