> On 1 Aug 2021, at 21:56, Hendrik Boom <hendrik@???> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 01:49:46PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
>> Josef Grosch via Dng said on Thu, 29 Jul 2021 15:32:05 -0700
>>
>>
>>> Another suggestion I have is to use the variable and method naming
>>> convention that java uses. I like the way it looks and I think camel
>>> case is more readable than snake case.
>>
>> This reminds me of something not yet in the outline. The originating
>> author should place, in comments, near the top, his or her syntax
>> conventions including naming conventions, brace placements if not
>> Python, spaces or tabs.
>>
>> I'm hidiously guilty of using violating my own conventions (or not
>> having any), so I should make that document at the start of a project.
>> Matter of fact, I should make it BEFORE my next project. Naturally, one
>> such stylesheet must be made for Python, another for C, etc.
>>
>> In an ideal world, here's how I'd do C blocks:
>>
>> if(mybool)
>> {
>> do_my_stuff()
>> }
>
> I tend to use
> if(mybool)
> { do_my_stuff();
> do_other_stuff);
> }
>
> I really believe matching braces should be on the same line, or,
> failing that, at the same level of indentation; i.e., above one
> another.
>
> And I'd like the compile to warn me of deviations from that.
>
> -- hendrik
>
>>
>> However, I do it the way Vim preformats for me, to make my life easier:
>>
>> if(mybool){
>> do_my_stuff()
>> }
>>
>> #ifndef AUTHOR
>> char * AUTHOR = "SteveT"
>> #endif
>>
>> AUTHOR
>>
>> Steve Litt
Just use indent(1) and forget about all stying problems? I prefer `indent -kr`, none of that GNU styling craziness!!
https://manpages.debian.org/buster/indent/indent.1.en.html