On Thu, 20 Oct 2016 20:45:00 -0300, David Bremner <david@tethera.net> wrote: > Franz Fellner <alpine.art.de@gmail.com> writes: > > > From a quick visual scan at least half the indented lines start with 4 spaces > > instead of TABS. As I understand the quoted paragraph that should be wrong. > > > > Can you be specific what what lines in what file? I have the feeling > you're misinterpreting something, or looking at a different file. This is from lib/database.cc: const char * _find_prefix (const char *name) { unsigned int i; for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (BOOLEAN_PREFIX_INTERNAL); i++) { if (strcmp (name, BOOLEAN_PREFIX_INTERNAL[i].name) == 0) return BOOLEAN_PREFIX_INTERNAL[i].prefix; } for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (BOOLEAN_PREFIX_EXTERNAL); i++) { if (strcmp (name, BOOLEAN_PREFIX_EXTERNAL[i].name) == 0) return BOOLEAN_PREFIX_EXTERNAL[i].prefix; } for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (PROBABILISTIC_PREFIX); i++) { if (strcmp (name, PROBABILISTIC_PREFIX[i].name) == 0) return PROBABILISTIC_PREFIX[i].prefix; } INTERNAL_ERROR ("No prefix exists for '%s'\n", name); return ""; } I set ":set list" and ":set listchars=tab:>-" to visualize tabs in vim. This shows me * the first two codelines (leaving out empty lines) are indented by 4 spaces * the first line in the first for loop is indented by only one TAB (IMHO should be two, because it is one leven down): this is a pattern you can find throughout the codebase. * the next two lines are indented by four spaces * the first line of the second for-loop is indented by one TAB. * and so on... Am I misinterpreting something here? Is this intended to be done that way? I also get confused by the different lengths of TAB/space-indenting. But probably that's because I never used it...