287

No tab key support

It has been a while for me here on Stack Overflow, and from the beginning of my experience I've noticed something which still leaves a bad taste in my mouth when I create and edit posts: in the current Markdown editor there's no support for the TAB key.

This isn't only related to Stack Overflow (obviously), it concerns all the Stack Exchange sites, although Stack Overflow users are the ones who suffer the most for this because of the enormous amount of short or long code snippets which get posted and edited every day by everyone.

It often happens that, when writing a code snippet, if I want to indent or dedent several lines of code I have to move the caret at the beginning of each line and manually add four spaces, and let's say it, this is just boring and time wasting. Despite the fact that I prefer tab (\t) characters, I understand that tabs may not always be rendered the same way, and it's better to use spaces for code snippets, but as of now, it's a real pain to always have to hit that spacebar thousand of times every day while writing posts.

Background research

I'm not posting another duplicated question here on meta, I've already seen someone trying to bring this feature request to the attention of Stack Exchange developers. Some examples of this are the following questions:

But unfortunately looks like this feature request has always been rejected. For example, quoting from the most upvoted answer I've found (emphasis mine):

General internet browser convention dictates that the tab key be used to cycle between various controls on the page, and not to represent the \t character, even when a text input control has focus.

For the site to fight this would be both somewhat difficult, because the browser is designed to not do what you are asking of it, and also violates the user expectation of this virtually ubiquitous web browser feature. While this may be possible, it's generally not a very good idea. [...]

Now, I understand that the real behavior of the TAB key should be to cycle between page controls and input fields, but that's a feature worth a submission form (some page with a good amount of input fields), and not a page containing a single main <textarea>.

Many programming sites already implement this by default, and we, as developers, generally expect the tab key to behave like this, being used to IDEs and text editors which support this feature by default. I personally hit the tab key several times a day while editing answers without thinking about it and always ending up being teleported at the bottom of the page, in the edit summary or tag field, having to scroll back to the top.

My proposal

Implementing tab characters (\t) is not a good idea, and that's ok. This although doesn't mean that we cannot implement four-spaces indentation with the TAB key.

To make these Markdown editors much more powerful and smart, I propose to implement a switchable TAB indentation functionality. It would basically be just a little button, nothing cumbersome, something similar to this:

example

Image edited by me

The user will simply toggle the functionality from that little button, and will be able to:

  • Indent by 4 spaces at the current caret position pressing TAB;
  • Dedent by 4 spaces (if they're present) at the current caret position pressing Shift+TAB;
  • Indent multiple lines of code by 4 spaces selecting them and pressing TAB;
  • Dedent multiple lines of code by 4 spaces selecting them and pressing Shift+TAB.

Here's a visual example of what I'm talking about:

example

GIF created by me using ScreenToGif v1.4.1

Now I think you probably understand why this would be really significant when talking about very long snippets of code with multiple nested indented blocks.

My personal solution

As a personal solution I created a little JavaScript script called textarea-devtab.js, which you can test here. It basically implements this small but very useful feature on any children textarea of the chosen Element. If you want, you can easily add this to your Chrome devtools code snippets and run it whenever you need (as I personally do at the moment).

Simple as this, you can:

// Enable it on any element's children textareas
myElement.enableTextareaDevTab();

// Disable it at any moment
myElement.disableTextareaDevTab();

// Enable it for any textarea of the page
document.body.enableTextareaDevTab();

It's just sixty lines of code so I don't see the need of any copyright/license/attribution, I just wanted to share it with my fellow programmers here on Stack Overflow :)


I would like to give a boost to this post so that Stack programmers will notice it as soon as possible.

Could we have this beautiful feature?

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  • 5
    I think this would be better asked over on meta.stackexchange.com. Apr 12, 2015 at 16:21
  • 12
    @MichaelIrigoyen perhaps some Moderator will migrate it if they find this question more suitable for the SE Meta. I asked here because this is the main SE site which will benefit from this feature, and SE Meta posts don't always get enough attention when being only related to programming sites. Apr 12, 2015 at 16:21
  • 1
    I don't disagree with you one bit. I would love to see this feature. However, the meta Stack Exchange site deals more with the software behind SO, MSO, etc. Apr 12, 2015 at 16:26
  • 4
    stackapps.com/questions/3247/…
    – AstroCB
    Apr 12, 2015 at 17:53
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    @Serenity Chome changes browser tabs on Ctrl+Tab, so most other browsers do. What decades-old standard are you talking about?
    – trailmax
    Apr 12, 2015 at 22:28
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    @Serenity: Note that at least on Windows, Ctrl-Tab has been the shortcut to switch dialog box tabs since 95 or before. It is therefore not reliably available for this use, and indeed I am not aware of it working in dialog boxes at all. (Ctrl-Enter, yes.) Any UI convention that does not exist on Windows is not "the standard". Apr 13, 2015 at 2:58
  • 2
    Aside: note that the Stack Exchange Data Explorer editor does indent and dedent with Tab / Shift+Tab. This is a good thing, and would do well to be ported over to the SE markdown editor.
    – senshin
    Apr 14, 2015 at 15:48
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    @senshin Agreed (though it does annoyingly only indent by 2 spaces!)
    – DavidG
    Apr 14, 2015 at 15:54
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    I've always wondered why do many sites indent by two spaces.. it's just not enough to distinguish indented code blocks at first sight. Apr 14, 2015 at 15:55
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    @MarcoBonelli I prefer 4, others prefer 2. The code snippet editor also prefers 2. I guess it's all a nature vs nurture thing. Did you first start with 4 spaces? With no evidence to support me, I would guess that older languages used 2 spaces due to screen space being a premium.
    – DavidG
    Apr 14, 2015 at 16:10
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    @MarcoBonelli A couple of years ago I would probably have agreed with you, but I think modern IDEs are powerful/clever enough to not care either way what the source file contains.
    – DavidG
    Apr 14, 2015 at 16:25
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    My major issue has always been the ` character for code blocks (especially in comments), which is not standard in the italian keyboard, and I always have to copy/paste it from somewhere else. Apr 14, 2015 at 16:41
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    Yes, yes, a thousand times yes! Every single time I'm editing code in SO, I hit the TAB key, only to find myself somewhere else on the page (and the editor completely offscreen). Note that the web-based IDEs all use TAB for indentation (and SHIFT-TAB to outdent), so "web standard TAB behavior" is a specious argument against. The CTRL-K behavior is hardly a replacement, what with all the quirks (one-level indent only, spurious blank lines added when indenting, etc). Jun 23, 2016 at 5:27
  • 1
    So, it's 2019 and this feature has not yet seen the light of day. Any site developer ever even commented this thread?
    – Magnetron
    Mar 20, 2019 at 13:21
  • 1
    Google Gmail hasn't even fixed this. I press tab and it tries to send the message.
    – Buddy Bob
    Jun 11, 2021 at 15:41

5 Answers 5

181

Yes, please!

We are developers - we basically expect Tab to indent code and Shift+Tab to unindent it.

This could be implemented on programming-related sites only (SO, Programmers, Code Review, Programming Puzzles) if you think it'd confuse users on other sites - but it'll feel natural to programmers.

I'd go as far as saying this feature should be on by default, and I don't see the point in being able to switch it off. The current behavior feels like editing code in notepad, while we could get something like, say, Notepad++ instead.

Moreover, many people over here don't even know they can use Ctrl+K for basic indentation support, and the behavior of Ctrl+K (indent when not indented, unindent when indented) is confusing in the first place - mainly because it diverges from what we expect from Tab. Also, it doesn't allow to indent more than once so it's useless for reformatting parts of code.

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  • 3
    Note: you can always add a fake initial line so that the behaviour of Ctrl+K or the {} button is indent instead of dedent. Although it requires adding a fake line and then removing it.
    – Bakuriu
    Apr 12, 2015 at 19:58
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    While we're at it, I often hit [Ctrl]+[s] to save the current state of my question/answer. It's silly, I know, because the site already does save the state. But it's even sillier to get that "save page" dialog of the browser. That's really annoying. Who would save a edit-page anyway?
    – stefan
    Apr 13, 2015 at 15:10
  • @stefan: Try Vim. jk:x
    – Kevin
    Apr 13, 2015 at 16:14
  • @Kevin I have to use vim way too often. Luckily this does not affect my keyboard usage habits. (It's awkward enough to do the [Ctrl]+[S] and use [Ctrl]+[Shift]+[C] in browsers just because you're about to paste something into a terminal and you're about to hit [Ctrl]+[Shift]+[V]. That's two very annoying things I won't get rid of too soon). So, no, thank you, I don't want to use vim as my default text editor.
    – stefan
    Apr 13, 2015 at 16:18
  • I totally support having this feature, and I agree with turning it on by default only for the programming sites and off by default for the others, but there should be a button to toggle it on and off on all sites if for no better reason than consistency between sites. A better reason for doing that, of course, is to allow users the choice of having it on or off no mater which site they're on in the SE network.
    – RobH
    Apr 13, 2015 at 16:39
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    Ctrl-K also doesn't work for code in a list item which needs to be (depth of list item + 1) * 4 spaces deep to work. Same with Blockquote
    – gman
    Feb 3, 2016 at 5:23
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    So... when is this going to work ? Mar 10, 2017 at 20:39
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There's an excellent user script that adds tab support to answer text edit fields. I installed it with TamperMonkey for Chrome, and it works great!

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9

Check out Better Stack Exchange (Google Chrome Extension). It swaps out the default text editor that Stack Exchange uses with a modified version of SimpleMDE.

Therefore, it supports indentation, inline code blocks, markdown, and all the other stuff you'd expect to be included by default. :)

Shameless plug: I wrote this extension, and I'm using it to write this answer!


screenshot

2

As an alternative to Tab and Shift+Tab, could I suggest Ctrl+] (right bracket) and Ctrl+[ (left bracket), respectively?

Advantages

  • Allows Tab and Shift+Tab to keep their current behaviour
  • Same shortcuts used by other editors such as Atom, Ace, and Gmail
  • Currently unused

Disadvantages

  • A bit obscure
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  • 1
    Those key commands are used on some platforms (macOS, at least) to mean forward / back (in the browser). Probably best to avoid stepping on that. Feb 3, 2022 at 5:49
  • @Gavin Isn't that Cmd-[? What about Ctrl-[? Or would that be totally unintuitive for a Mac user? IIRC, Ctrl shortcuts are rare on Mac, right?
    – wjandrea
    Feb 3, 2022 at 5:53
  • Generally, application keyboard shortcuts that use Ctrl on other platforms are translated to using Cmd on mac. And keyboard shortcuts that don't use Cmd are not nonexistant, but are very rare (outside of terminal programs). Feb 3, 2022 at 5:56
  • @Gavin So we could still use Ctrl-[, or no?
    – wjandrea
    Feb 3, 2022 at 6:00
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    As a former and occasional Mac user, I think it's a bad idea, but it's not my call. Feb 3, 2022 at 6:01
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    [ is by AltGr + 8 on some keyboard layouts (e.g., the one I am using writing this). And ] is by AltGr + 9. Two modifier keys would be too much. It should work well on other keyboards than the United States keyboard layout. Mar 5, 2022 at 15:39
-21

I really have to disagree with this. As annoying as it can be, the default behavior is designed to allow for mouse-free movement between inputs on the page. Even though everyone has mice now, you still don't want to remove that ability and completely alter the user's experience like that.

Every time I make a new answer or question that uses code, I just copy the 4 spaces and do a Ctrl-V anytime I would normally do a Tab.

If the user wants to create a user script like David Harkness is suggesting, that's great. Each individual user who wants that functionality can do that.

I'm also curious what the effects would be for screen readers and other visually impaired assisters if we remove the native "Tab" functionality from a single box.

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    I don't really think that switching input fields (which are only title, body and tags) is more useful than having a tab key indentation functionality (which every programmer is used to). Furthermore, the Ctrl+V option is not that efficient, since that when you write code you often have to use your clipboard (Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V, Ctrl+X) to manipulate the code. Mar 11, 2016 at 16:19
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    Yes, every programmer is used to that in their IDE, but this is not an IDE and other uses need to be taken into consideration.
    – krillgar
    Mar 11, 2016 at 17:04

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