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[Ctrl+Shift+Right], [Del].
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I am also sloppy. I hate that combination with a passion. I am constantly deleting code because of it.
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That's what [Ctrl]+[Z] is for...
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I can't say I have given it a moments thought
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VS makes them soft automatically, and I don't care enough to change it. I usually type hard tabs though, it's just faster.
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VS seems to have solved this problem for the most part. I hate when "old schoolers" used 1/2/3 spaces instead of 4. In those cases, if they diverged from 4 spaces I forced them to use hard tabs so that we could all get along. Otherwise, VS automatically defaults to 4 spaces and I make that the coding standard for our group. It also helps when viewing code in different text editors... everything looks the same with soft tabs (IBM VisualAge defaulted to 8 spaces for every hard tab, eek!!)
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1) You can tell VS what you want to use
2) [ctrl]+[k],[ctrl]+[d] will do the magic on the rest of old files
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I know, but it doesn't matter to me.
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This will only work using correct settings?
I had the following case which awful results:
- Existing Code. Indention with 4 spaces (sometimes ...)
- VS: Indention 2 spaces
D'oh!
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uses damn space!
d{^__^}b - it's time to fly
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Agree 0%
Collective code owner ship made easy when indenting with tabs. Some prefer indention of 2 chars, others 4, ...
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I prefer tabs(char(4)) in my coding, however sometimes it varies on the language platform.
Thanks
Md. Marufuzzaman
I will not say I have failed 1000 times; I will say that I have discovered 1000 ways that can cause failure – Thomas Edison.
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Md. Marufuzzaman wrote: tabs(char(4))
They didn't refer to some SQL field, char 9 is \t....
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hmm
Thanks
Md. Marufuzzaman
I will not say I have failed 1000 times; I will say that I have discovered 1000 ways that can cause failure – Thomas Edison.
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