Tabs are important for programming
in languages which use indentation to show nesting,
as short-hand for producing white-space for leading
indents. As a programmer, you have to decide how to
use indentation, and how or whether tab characters
map to your indentation scheme.
Ideally, tab characters map directly
to the amount of indent that you use to distinguish
nesting levels in your code. Unfortunately, the Unix
standard for interpretation of tab characters is eight
characters (probably dating back to mechanical capabilities
of the original teletype), which is usually too coarse
for a single indent.
Most text editors, NEdit included,
allow you to change the interpretation of the tab
character, and many programmers take advantage of
this, and set their tabs to 3 or 4 characters to match
their programming style. In NEdit you set the hardware
tab distance in for the current window, or (general),
or (language-specific)
to change the defaults for future windows.
Changing the meaning of the tab character
makes programming much easier while you're in the
editor, but can cause you headaches outside of the
editor, because there is no way to pass along the
tab setting as part of a plain-text file. All of the
other tools which display, print, and otherwise process
your source code have to be made aware of how the
tabs are set, and must be able to handle the change.
Non-standard tabs can also confuse other programmers,
or make editing your code difficult for them if their
text editors don't support changes in tab distance.
Emulated Tabs
An alternative to changing the interpretation
of the tab character is tab emulation. In the
dialog(s), turning on causes the Tab key to insert the correct
number of spaces and/or tabs to bring the cursor the
next emulated tab stop, as if tabs were set at the
emulated tab distance rather than the hardware tab
distance. Backspacing immediately after entering an
emulated tab will delete the fictitious tab as a unit,
but as soon as you move the cursor away from the spot,
NEdit will forget that the collection of spaces and
tabs is a tab, and will treat it as separate characters.
To enter a real tab character with "Emulate Tabs"
turned on, use Ctrl+Tab.
It is also possible to tell NEdit not
to insert ANY tab characters at all in the course
of processing emulated tabs, and in shifting and rectangular
insertion/deletion operations, for programmers who
worry about the misinterpretation of tab characters
on other systems.
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