On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 01:38:38PM -0400, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
> David E. Wheeler wrote:
>> On May 1, 2009, at 8:38 AM, Robert Haas wrote:
>>
>>> Speaking of space/tab settings, one thing I'm fuzzy on is the rule
>>> for wrapping long lines. I understand that a line that extends
>>> past 80 characters has to be wrapped, but the amount of
>>> indentation on the continuation line doesn't appear to follow a
>>> consistent pattern - or does it?
>>
>> “Perl Best Practices” recommends an indentation of 4 spaces, both
>> for block indentations and line continuations. Not sure what'd be
>> best for C, though.
>
> Please, let's not have a whole host of different indentation styles.
> Postgres has a well established style. Let's stick to it in both
> perl and C.
Perl is not C, and there's no good reason to make them look the same.
We don't format SQL the same way we do C either, and that's a totally
reasonable decision.
Using idiomatic perl like this:
foreach my $element (@array) { # clear, short, idiomatic code here
}
instead of Rube Goldberg constructs like this:
my $i;
for ($i=0; $i <= $#array; ++$i)
{ # kludges up down and sideways here
}
is a good idea because it makes it easier for Perl programmers to
maintain. It's also more efficient on the machine, for what that's
worth.
Cheers,
David.
--
David Fetter <david@fetter.org> http://fetter.org/
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