I'm confused and saddened by the staff response here, and would like to urge reconsideration.
Accuracy is more important than uniformity
This way we can guarantee that whitespace in our code snippets is consistent and uniform.
Programmers expect their tools not to lie to them. Debugging problems often requires a representation of data that is as raw and literal as possible, so that things that are out of place can be seen, where a "friendlier" representation might obscure the difference. Making things look nice is the job of editors.
Whether it's because tabs must be used consistently (as with Makefiles), cause problems when mixed with spaces (Python), or are distinct from spaces and must be used carefully to communicate the program (Whitespace), being able to distinguish tabs from spaces matters. Converting to either spaces or tabs loses information. If there is supposed to be a mixture for whatever reason, you can't get it back after conversion.
There are actual questions on Stack Overflow where diagnosing the problem depends on recognizing the indentation for what it actually is, and currently we can only see this in the raw source. Even if someone comes along and finds the problem that way, the result looks confusing for people who arrive later, perhaps via a search engine. (After all, nothing is amiss in the code actually shown on the page, even if you select the whitespace).
It should be easy enough to preserve the tabs, and also background-shade them, by putting them into a span
that applies the appropriate CSS. (After all, the syntax highlighting already works this way.) They could be shaded even if they are converted (since each tab will directly correspond to at least one space).
What's actually most convenient?
You're right that this makes things for Makefile samples harder when it comes to copy/pasting. I recommend adding an explicit explanation that readers should use tabs, not spaces, when writing a make
snippet.... It's... to make... copy/pasting... a little more pleasant by presenting something that's consistent. You'd be surprised how many code snippets we see that include a wild mix of tabs and spaces.
This is self-contradictory. Aside from my personal distaste for encouraging copy and paste (though nothing can really be done about that), the change that is supposed to make things "more pleasant" is actively a hindrance in possibly tens of thousands of cases (hat tip to the OP). Everyone expects web pages to offer "copy to clipboard" buttons nowadays anyway; that would be a fine spot to add "and normalize indentation while you're at it" logic, while people who want the verbatim text can use the browser's built-in copy and paste.
For that matter, people who are prone to copying and pasting will probably be copying and pasting into an IDE (well... not for Makefiles, probably), which will happily reformat the text anyway (along with adding extra indentation appropriate to the context where it's pasted).
makefile
, what other tools/languages require use of TAB character?source
view from the revision history (and during editing).source
view for your example. The TABs are preserved (and not converted when saved) and can be copy-pasted from that page (and during editing). They are only converted for rendering purposes (a sort of caching?).