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Re: learning Emacs Lisp
From: |
Juanma Barranquero |
Subject: |
Re: learning Emacs Lisp |
Date: |
Tue, 11 Nov 2008 12:17:09 +0100 |
On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 12:04, Richard Riley <rileyrgdev@googlemail.com> wrote:
> I like the
>
> if(f){
> /**/
> }else{
> /**/
> }
>
> K&R style.
I like it too, more or less, but the equivalent in Pascal is quite ugly IMO.
But, as you say, that's K&R style, so it is widely known. Of course
indentation styles are conventions; we find them ugly or beautiful,
mostly, out of familiarity. And in the Lisp family of languages,
aligned brackets are unusual, except in very deeply indented code; and
even so, it's often not that brackets are aligned, as that a bunch of
them are moved to the next line to avoid having too many closing
parenthesis put together.
> Still, one man's meat is another man's poison.
Sure.
Juanma
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, (continued)
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Andreas Politz, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Richard Riley, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Lennart Borgman, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Andreas Politz, 2008/11/11
- Message not available
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Richard Riley, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Juanma Barranquero, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp, Richard Riley, 2008/11/11
- Re: learning Emacs Lisp,
Juanma Barranquero <=
RE: Grouping related buffers, Drew Adams, 2008/11/10
Message not available
Re: Grouping related buffers, Scott Frazer, 2008/11/10
Grouping related buffers, grischka, 2008/11/10
Re: Grouping related buffers, rustom, 2008/11/13