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indent_shift

Properties

  Category: Indenting options
      Type: numeric [-1 .. 1]
   Default: 0

Description

How to indent continued shift expressions ('<<' and '>>').
Set align_left_shift=false when using this.
 0: Align shift operators instead of indenting them (default)
 1: Indent by one level
-1: Preserve original indentation

Examples

raw CPP code indent_shift=-1 indent_shift=0 indent_shift=1
/*-- this is the default sample --*/ int main(int argc, char** argv){ int n = 0; if(arg>=1){ printf("Hello %s!\n", argv[1]); n=strlen(argv[1]); }else{ puts("Hello world!"); } return n; } /*-- this is the default sample --*/ int main(int argc, char** argv){ int n = 0; if(arg>=1){ printf("Hello %s!\n", argv[1]); n=strlen(argv[1]); }else{ puts("Hello world!"); } return n; } /*-- this is the default sample --*/ int main(int argc, char** argv){ int n = 0; if(arg>=1){ printf("Hello %s!\n", argv[1]); n=strlen(argv[1]); }else{ puts("Hello world!"); } return n; } /*-- this is the default sample --*/ int main(int argc, char** argv){ int n = 0; if(arg>=1){ printf("Hello %s!\n", argv[1]); n=strlen(argv[1]); }else{ puts("Hello world!"); } return n; }
 

Not the best code for this option? See how to improve the .uds file used to generate these examples.