On Mon, 25 Nov 2002, Shachar Shemesh wrote: [...] > These are, to the best of my memory, the conclusions. In the examples, > \t means tab (it will be followed by a real tab), ^ means space: > 1. Indentations - Hard tabs must be used for indicating indent level.
We don't have a standard but the closest thing we have is code written by Alexandre and he is certainly not using tabs. He seems tobe using 4 space indentations instead. Dosn't this: > \t for( a=0; b<a; > \t \t a-- ) ^^ contradict this > \t for( a=0; b<a; > \t ^^^^a-- ) The extra tab seems wrong in the first example. (Yeah, the rules involving tabs are complex and one is way too likely to get them wrong) Besides if you leave a space after the '(', isn't it more logical to align 'a--' with 'a=0'? (Solution: don't leave a space after '(', but that's just me) One rule we do have: No space at the end of lines. -- Francois Gouget [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://fgouget.free.fr/ Stolen from an Internet user: "f u cn rd ths, u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgrmmng !"