On 01/07/15 23:16, Johannes Berg wrote:
On Wed, 2015-01-07 at 20:18 +0100, Giel van Schijndel wrote:

IMO the aligned block of code has the significant advantage of taking
advantage of humans' ability to spot things that break a pattern. Which
in this case becomes *very* visible when properly aligned, because
without the alignment there is no (visual) pattern (or at least not one
very suitable for my "visual processing system", I know the same applies
to at least some others).

Yeah, well, but why even invoke that "visual processing system"?

If you look, for example, at the __skb_clone function it just uses a
macro:

#define C(x) n->x = skb->x

This requires fixed names so I generally prefer to add them:

#define C(d, s, f)      (d)->f = (s)->f

and then

        C(len);
        C(data_len);

        C(acx, conf, window_size);
        C(acx, conf, increase_time);

Regards,
Arend


etc.

johannes

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