It has just now been noted by Peter Duniho in a comment, but I think one aspect is important enough for making it a full answer.
In most cases, indentation might only be a matter of aesthetics, and still we can argue whether edits like this are substantial. However, in this specific case the language was Python. Python happens to be a language where whitespace has syntactic significance. Newlines (or semicolons) separate statements, and levels of indentation (rather than braces) mark blocks. Surely there are other languages with the same odd feature, for instance ABC, one of the predecessors of Python.
So here's my suggestion: never edit whitespace in Python code (or other languages, where whitespace matters). In an answer, you might "just" break something; in a question, you might inadvertently cause the very error in question to disappear.
Note that in your specific case, the final rendered code in the original answer was actually invalid due to missing whitespace, and your edit would've fixed it. But this is the rarer scenario, and it's better to err on the side of safety. If you see a language where whitespace is important (mostly Python in case of Stack Overflow), don't touch the code!
To serve as further warning, consider this mildly contorted bit of Python code:
doit = True
if doit:
for n in list_of_numbers:
if n%2==0:
print("List contains an even number.")
break
else:
print("List contains only odd numbers.")
This will print whether the iterable called list_of_numbers
contains only odd numbers, and will short-circuit if it finds an even number. A well-meaning braces-user might think to "fix" the indentation of the else
clause, and edit the corresponding post to reflect this, thereby breaking the code. Similarly, if the user posting this piece of code doesn't use proper code formatting, it will be very hard for somebody unfamiliar with the language to get the indented intendation intended indentation right.
,1,0
is in the last line of code... But that really doesn't look like an answer worth your time. And I don't recommend adding dummy text. It'd likely get your suggested edit rejected.np.where
could/should have just been a comment on the accepted answer, rather than a full answer on its own.