-23

I've just posted this answer with a code block copy-pasted from my tty (zsh) and it turned out looking like this:

>>> haystack = "qabcdzzzefgyyyh"                                                                                                                                                                                                               
>>> needle = "acgh"                                                                                                                                                                                                                            
>>> it = iter(haystack)                                                                                                                                                                                                                        
>>> all(x in it for x in needle)                                                                                                                                                                                                               
True

Big horizontal scrollbar. I had to manually edit it to look like this:

>>> haystack = "qabcdzzzefgyyyh"
>>> needle = "acgh"
>>> it = iter(haystack)
>>> all(x in it for x in needle)
True

Could we strip trailing whitespace off lines automatically, when submitting a post?

18
  • 16
    Then how would you ask questions about Whitespace :) Oct 8, 2018 at 20:09
  • 3
    What if the issue the person is having is related to the trailing white space or more accurately invisible characters in the trailing whitespace?
    – Joe W
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:11
  • 1
    Just stripping space (0x20) would be okay, no need to include other weird invisible characters.
    – wim
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:18
  • 9
    I also think that the user should be responsible for formatting to a degree and not depend on the system to remove content like trailing spaces that they think should not be there.
    – Joe W
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:20
  • 1
    Many text editors and IDEs provide this convenience, is there a reason why you think it would not also be a helpful feature for the text editor in the website's UI?
    – wim
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:24
  • 9
    At a base level, I don't disagree with this request. But to answer your posit, given that I am fully conscious that this is a website, I should not have any expectation whatsoever that the website will provide any extra clean-up of the content I post, including stripping whitespace. I would fully expect that the whitespace in my post is preserved if one day I have a situation where some clever engineer decided to make all of their CSS class identifiers different kinds of whitespace.
    – Makoto
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:40
  • In a text editor the user can chose to use or to not use the feature. What you are suggesting is removing the choice for the user. If you wanted to suggest a feature to add the ability to strip trailing whitespace when the user clicks a button that would be different then enabling it by default.
    – Joe W
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:41
  • @Makoto please don't give them ideas:( Oct 8, 2018 at 20:43
  • 1
    @MartinJames: It's too late. I thought I had the question favorited which did this, but I guess I didn't.
    – Makoto
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:46
  • 2
    Well, right now it's causing problems for me. And these situations where it might be undesirable to strip trailing whitespace by default seem contrived, but perhaps it could be an opt-in feature to turn on in the user preferences in that case.
    – wim
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:53
  • So to fix a simple problem that pasting into an editor that you can strip trailing whitespace with you want the stack exchange devs to code an entire new feature that people would have to opt-in to use?
    – Joe W
    Oct 8, 2018 at 20:58
  • 6
    No, I just post on meta to gauge if the idea is popular or not. Sheesh...
    – wim
    Oct 8, 2018 at 21:12
  • 4
    In Fortran fixed form source all lines (with default characters) are exactly 72 columns wide, having trailing spaces as necessary. Oct 8, 2018 at 22:21
  • Interesting. Can you actually find a Fortran question which is doing that? I searched and couldn't find a single one.. even the questions talking about fixed form are not using 72 cols in their code snippets.
    – wim
    Oct 9, 2018 at 5:21
  • 2

3 Answers 3

6

Well, right now it's causing problems for me. And these situations where it might be undesirable to strip trailing whitespace by default seem contrived, but perhaps it could be an opt-in feature to turn on in the user preferences in that case.

There's a number of issues with this:

  • User preferences aren't the most discoverable. Whether this preference is defaulted to on or off, unless it's thoroughly documented within the editor itself, users aren't going to realize there's a way to toggle it (and frankly most users aren't expecting this sort of feature to be in a post editor).

  • You aren't going to know in advance when your next problem might turn out to be a problem with whitespace. If you turn or leave it on and it strips the problematic whitespace from your question, you'll find yourself in the situation Laurel describes, hunting around only to eventually find out that the editor was tampering with your MCVE (so it no longer meets the V criteria) — only, this time because you asked it to.

If this sort of feature were to be added to the editor, it should be a formatting tool you use on demand with arbitrary selections (including the entire post, if you so choose), not an automated filter. Some text editors and IDEs may offer this feature, though most I see only have the option of stripping trailing whitespace from the entire document. But even then I'd make sure my code actually still reproduces the problem as expected once the whitespace is stripped... and the better place for me to be doing that is within my IDE, not the Stack Overflow post editor, since that's where I'd be running my code.

2
  • Seeing same issue in questions occasionally: stackoverflow.com/q/53162817/674039
    – wim
    Nov 5, 2018 at 22:05
  • @wim: Well, there's a reason I use the term "post" consistently in my answer... seeing as this is a terminal-specific quirk I don't see why it would be limited to answers.
    – BoltClock
    Nov 6, 2018 at 3:34
17

Wouldn't be a fan of this, personally. If you don't want the whitespace there, then just delete it - it's not that hard!

There's always going to be that weird esoteric question asked in the future that relies on said whitespace being there, and then we're just going to get a corresponding meta question entitled "Please don't strip trailing whitespace from code blocks."

11

Removing the spaces will change the meaning of some code. In particular, it will affect:

  • Multiline strings
  • Regexes which end in one or more spaces
  • Languages that require fixed length lines of code, as francescalus notes in the comments is the case for FORTRAN.

What's worse is that this change is so subtle that it could take at least an hour for someone to figure out what went wrong with their code between the time when they wrote it and the time when someone comments that it doesn't work. It's not something that would be expected, so it's not something people would be looking out for. I've had this same sort of change (specifically ... was changed to automatically when pasting into an IDE that used a non-fixed-width font) and it took me about an hour to find out what happened.

2
  • Multiline strings is a good point. But some IDE have this same situation and take care around it (for example, PyCharm will detect if within a multiline string and does not strip trailing whitespace in that case). For regex, I don't understand your point, it will still need the closing quote character. And FORTRAN .. well, I assume those developers will have passed by the time this feature would get implemented.
    – wim
    Oct 9, 2018 at 5:26
  • 8
    @wim An IDE deals with a single known programming language. On Stack Overflow, you don't necessarily know what programming language is being used in a code block, or even if it's actually code and not English formatted as code. My point is that there are many cases where removing whitespace would be bad. It's much too complex to account for everything and it would be simply easier to remove the whitespace by hand or ignore it when it's not needed.
    – Laurel
    Oct 9, 2018 at 5:39

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