scripts: Adopted double-indent on multiline expressions

This matches the style used in C, which is good for consistency:

  a_really_long_function_name(
          double_indent_after_first_newline(
              single_indent_nested_newlines))

We were already doing this for multiline control-flow statements, simply
because I'm not sure how else you could indent this without making
things really confusing:

  if a_really_long_function_name(
          double_indent_after_first_newline(
              single_indent_nested_newlines)):
      do_the_thing()

This was the only real difference style-wise between the Python code and
C code, so now both should be following roughly the same style (80 cols,
double-indent multiline exprs, prefix multiline binary ops, etc).
This commit is contained in:
Christopher Haster
2024-11-06 15:31:17 -06:00
parent 48c2e7784b
commit 007ac97bec
34 changed files with 6290 additions and 6109 deletions

View File

@ -57,24 +57,25 @@ def main(paths, **args):
else:
print('%08x' % crc)
if __name__ == "__main__":
import argparse
import sys
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description="Calculates crc32cs.",
allow_abbrev=False)
description="Calculates crc32cs.",
allow_abbrev=False)
parser.add_argument(
'paths',
nargs='*',
help="Paths to read. Reads stdin by default.")
'paths',
nargs='*',
help="Paths to read. Reads stdin by default.")
parser.add_argument(
'-x', '--hex',
action='store_true',
help="Interpret as a sequence of hex bytes.")
'-x', '--hex',
action='store_true',
help="Interpret as a sequence of hex bytes.")
parser.add_argument(
'-s', '--string',
action='store_true',
help="Interpret as strings.")
'-s', '--string',
action='store_true',
help="Interpret as strings.")
sys.exit(main(**{k: v
for k, v in vars(parser.parse_intermixed_args()).items()
if v is not None}))
for k, v in vars(parser.parse_intermixed_args()).items()
if v is not None}))