[email protected] wrote: > I'm using GNU indent version 2.2.10 on a Slackware 13.0 64 bit system. > > The texinfo page says any space between a # and "include" is removed by > default. > If you want to leave it the space, then one should use the -lps option. > > Given this one line source file (call it test.c) that has 1 space between > the # and "include": > > # include <stdio.h> > > if I run > > indent -st test.c > > indent does not make any changes to the file: the space between the # and > include > is left intact. Just to make sure the default wasn't to leave the space, I > tried: > > indent -nlps test.c > > and again indent did nothing: the space between the # and include was > maintained. > > in other words, the -nlps option (which is the default) does not work for me. > > I found this while running indent on a much larger file where indent did do > a lot of clean up for me. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding what the -nlps > option is supposed to do, I dunno. I would appreciate it if someone > could kindly look into this and let me know if if you believe it is a > bug. > > Looks like a bug, thanks for reporting it. It seems the regression tests only test for the opposite action of inserting spaces :-(
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