On Sat, 20 Jan 2007 23:51:24 -0300, Gabriel Genellina wrote: > As the indentation *is* significant in python, none of the above can > help if you lose the indentation. Try to reconstruct this: > > def foo(): > if a>0: > if b>0: > print 1 > print 2 > else: > return 3 > return 4 > > The tools may help to make the indentation consistent (tabs/8 > spaces/4 spaces/2 spaces mixed) or look better, but not to make it right.
Sure -- but a heuristic that gets it right *sometimes* may still be useful, provided the user knows that the code may not be indented correctly. There are lots of legal Python blocks where the indentation CAN be reconstructed correctly, and only a relatively small proportion where it can't -- the tool could do its best, and warn the user when there are indents that can't be dealt with. Or even refuse the temptation to guess, but re-indent whatever parts of the code it is sure about. Still, it is better not to lose the indentation in the first place. -- Steven. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list