Message from @azathoth
Discord ID: 473932150941417495
I thought you were taking the piss
Douglas Comer
Gnu's Not Unix
I *was* taking the piss at first ๐
Linus Is Not UniX
@meratrix yeah, you told me about him
whats the point of Xinu?
or, LINus User eXperience
itโs used mostly for research I believe
NixOS is nice
and then of course embedded systems as well.
purely functional and you can rollback to updates
thats some old 80s shit
runs on PDP11
i guess they actually MEAN its not unix, unlike GNU, who just copied unix
xinu runs on m68k <:GWcmeisterPeepoLove:403295311189245952>
sounds like youve got a seasoned prof at least
I personally use the Google Java Style code:
*Each time a new block or block-like construct is opened, the indent increases by two spaces. When the block ends, the indent returns to the previous indent level. The indent level applies to both code and comments throughout the block.*
ill just do whatever the c++ standard is
i get a lil too creative with formatting when left to my own devices
C++ standard has a style guide?
i'm sure?
theres definitely a standard when writing it commercially
@M4Gunner you a tabs guy right?
I know, that Kernighan and Ritchie suggested a style for C, which not all adhere to
i only used spaces when i first started
Bjarne has his own style guide for cpp
What do you mean with using spaces? I use indent, but it gets transformed into spaces by my IDE
the reason for this is that the code looks in all editors and IDEs the same
sounds annoying
tabs are easier to nav when editing
so if my IDE converted all tabs to spaces, it would bother me
if it wanted to convert all instances of x amount of spaces to tabs, that might be okay
you will not be affected by it with a sophisticaed IDE
its really one of the stupidest points of contention
they both do literally the same thing: nothing.
sounds like sophisticated IDEs like to mutilate code without me realizing
the problem is that the code looks different in editors with different indent size