h a l f b a k e r yWhat's a nice idea like yours doing in a place like this?
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Have a standard filename that all editors would read.
At the very minimum, it checks on if all the files should be
in
windows/linux newline type. And also it checks if tabs
means
4 spaces or the tab character.
Each file is scoped to its folder and any folders under it.
editor config
http://editorconfig.org/ [mofosyne, Jul 07 2016]
File Signatures
http://www.garykess...rary/file_sigs.html Not exactly what the idea suggests, but an alternative method in general use for all manner of non-text files. It'd be relatively trivial to adopt a header-encoding block in which this kind of meta information could be logged. Windows notepad suffered from a bug where some header-block encoding hack was exposed when saving text files with a particular character combination at the top. [zen_tom, Jul 08 2016]
Notepad and encoding blocks
https://blogs.msdn....0070417-00/?p=27223 [zen_tom, Jul 08 2016]
some haiku
http://jti.lib.virg...n/BeiShik.utf8.html [Voice, Jul 09 2016]
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Annotation:
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//Have a standard filename that all editors would
read.// |
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Also, how about a snappier idea name, with the
parenthetical comment in the subtitle? |
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Hey, I happen to like my indents, when writing a computer
program, to be 2 spaces, not 4. |
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MaxwellBuchanan, Jul 07 2016 |
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Good idea, edited. Also I wonder if editor config has baked
this |
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As do I*. The solution is to never, ever use tabs and use an editor that's line-ending agnostic. |
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( * Except when writing assembly, where massive indents with one instruction per line is traditional.) |
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You mean like "buglist_4spctabs_nix.txt"? |
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Or do you mean a standard header block in the hex of the
file that describes the character encoding, possible
source and other gubbins to do with the file? That exists
for non text files, and I think there is a minimal blob of
content right at the head of any text file that helps
identify it as such. |
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Lots of existing editors (notepad++, textwrangler, atom,
Textpad etc) use filename extension recognition to
decide on format colouring, layout, rendering and so on -
so in a sense, this is already a thing. |
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And where it's not a thing, plugins and utilities exist to
flatten, standardise, cleanse, flush and otherwise prettify
your content - it's a bit of a wild-west though, so yeah
could come in handy. |
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I'd prefer it though to limit the information contained in a
filename to describing the content of a file, rather than
including formatting details. It's hard enough searching
(on filename) for something you want to find without
worrying about anything else. |
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This idea is illegible, and not because of any syntactic difficulty but out of laziness. [-] |
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This idea is written like a haiku. |
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There should be seperate rules for English language haikus. In Japanese the number of syllables is an important. |
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The tree cut
down breaks early
at my little window
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is a beautiful example of a haiku embracing this limitation. In English it only takes 3,3,6 syllables |
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Looking down I see
cool in the moonlight
4000 houses
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For an English poem to be so restricted I think it should have a format of 4,5,4 syllables. This strips the language to its essentials. |
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an angry sun
without a warning
breaks through curtains
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Only by changing the format can this poem be forced into baring the essentials. It seems not at first but the longer version has superfluous words. |
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Due to its anger
The sun snaps through my window,
a programmer's bane.
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That last line must not be spoken, or the spirit of haiku is missed. I think the recipe for a haiku requires a large portion of Zen-like asceticism. A less restrictive recipe makes a completely different kind of dessert. |
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Those who demand 5,7,5 haikus in English are supporting the rule at total expense of its spirit. |
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I just reread the last line of the idea after reading the
annotations, and realized what it is. |
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It's not "text editor looks at the name of the file you open
for clues as to how to interpret and format it." |
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It's "you can put a file with a specific name (such as
FORMAT.txt) in any folder, and the text editor reads the
formatting rules you've defined in that file when you open
any other file in the same folder or a subfolder that
doesn't have its own formatting rules file." |
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I guess it would be kinda like .gitignore and similar rule
files. You know, it's probably already implemented. |
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Edit: *checks first link* There you go. |
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