Prog4comments

10.4 - Getting to know our tools #

Okay, we now have the ability to run and debug code but we still need set up and go over a few features in your text editor (VSCode) to make things easier. Plus, now’s a good time to introduce comments and indentation and why they matter in code.

This may seem a bit out of order, but at this stage there’s problems with prioritizing how much to learn about the tool versus the craft. To equate to something more tangible, it’s like learning the skills to design and craft a wood working project verses learning to use a saw. Ultimately, you need to do both. While, yes, learning the tool will come with experience, you still need to know enough not to cut your fingers off - or, in this case, to not waste a ton of time and think programming is overly difficult and tedious.

Most of this comes down to learning a few extra shortcuts and setting some preferences. Imagine using a computer without ctrl + C for copy, ctrl + V for paste, etc.? It would be really slow and annoying to copy, paste, select all, save, and other basic actions. Well, just like any other software learning how to use your text editor and related tools for writing code will make it way less awful.

Generic shortcut reference

It occurs to me that enough people today are growing up on a smart phone that it’s possible not everyone will know all of the common shortcuts. Don’t feel bad if this is you. Here’s a quick table:

Key Combo Typical Action
ctrl + C Copy
ctrl + V Paste
ctrl + X Cut (Copy & Remove)
ctrl + S Save
ctrl + F Find
ctrl + H Find & Replace
ctrl + Z Undo
ctrl + A Select All
ctrl + N (or ctrl + T , depending on the program) Make a new document (or new tab)
ctrl + + OR ctrl + mouse wheel up Zoom in / Increase font size
ctrl + - OR ctrl + mouse wheel down Zoom out / Decrease font size
ctrl + / ctrl + Move one word to the right/left
ctrl + backspace Delete whole word (depending on your hands, keyboard, and typing style this might be uncomfortable)
ctrl + W Close document
ctrl + P Open print dialogue (VS code doesn’t have one!)
ctrl + tab Change tab (works in browsers, VSCode, etc.)

Function Key Typical Action
F11 Make the program full screen
F5 Refresh the page
alt + F4 Close application (In Windows, may not work in Linux/Mac)
F12 Open up developer tools (Usually in a web browser)

Keep in mind, the specific program you’re using will almost certainly have many more than this, and may actually override some of these. As we go through this page I’ll be showing you some of VSCode’s shortcuts, but there’s a full cheat-sheet that depends on your os - here a link to each:

They’re mostly the same, but the mostly may trip you up, so ╮(─▽─)╭

Indentation #

In Python, indentation is relevant to the meaning of the code, in C, while not necessary,They’re not techncially needed in C because curly braces - { and } - define sections of code. However, while the computer may still be able to understand code without reasonable indentation, humans (including you) won’t be able to easily, so it still matters. reading it without sucks. So, how does one indent well? Well, there’s been an ongoing fight between programs on if you should indent by using tabs, 2 spaces, 3 spaces, or 4 spaces.

Honestly, it doesn’t matter much as long as it’s consistent in a given project. VS Code will default to trying to match the style of whatever file you open - this works because either way, you should be able to literally hit the tab key. If the project uses spaces, it will insert the correct number of spaces. Tabs? a tab. Magic.

With this, hitting backspace will remove however many spaces one tab inserts automatically - this is actually the default in VSCode, with a tab key being 4 spaces. This can be a bit strange when navigating code though, as if tabs get turned into spaces, you’ll have to hit arrow keys an unnatural amount of times. If you set File→Prefrences→Settings→"Editor: Stick Tab Stops" to “on”, they’ll always “feel” like tabs even if they’re not and you can just never think about it again. (unless you have to open it in another editor)

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# Here's a comment in Python

def my_function():
    # This line is indented in by one tab
    # code that is indented like this in
    # python is a child of the block above
    # (where it makes sense)
    # so, these next to lines belong to
    # my_function()
    a = 1
    return a

# This code, going back to no-indent,
# is not in my_function()
for i in range(10):
    # but this print is in this for loop
    print(i)
    
def my_other_function():
    for i in range(10):
        for j in range(20):
            # This will run 200 times
            # Do you see why?
            print(i * j)

White space #

When writing code, you’ll want to add some empty lines where they make sense. I’m not going to provide to much guidance on this because it’s really something that’s a you’ll-know-it-when-you-see-it, but don’t be afraid to add blank lines in C or python to make your code more clear.

Comments #

Before we actually start writing code, I want to show you that you can mix in comments - that is messages to yourself - into your code. Writing useful comments is an artform. It’s often much more relevant to write why you’ve done something than how code works - mostly because if the code isn’t pretty obvious to read it’s probably not good code (there are exceptions, obviously.)

C #

In C you can type comments in two ways, either by beginning a line with

// two slashes

or

/* using these */

The advantage to the latter is it works for multiple lines

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int a = 12;
/* The comment starts here.
 This is still a comment.
 And so is this.
 The comment ends after this → */
printf("%d",a);

though, a lot of people (myself included) prefer to only use // and just put it at the start of each line in a multi-line comment.

Python #

All comment in python start with a #. If we want multiple lines, we just need to start each one with a #

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a = 12
# The variable a sholud be 12 
# here so this will print 12
print(a)

One nice thing you can do with comments is put them before a line of code to “comment out” a section you don’t want to run. For example, using python:

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a = 12
b = 8
c = 0
# The following line won't run because we've put it in a comment:
# c = a + b
# So this will print 0:
print(c)

But if we removed the # from before the c = a + b it would run again. You can do the same thing in C, just using the different comment syntax. Sometimes, this is really helpful for debugging.

In VSCode, if you want to comment out a single line, just type ctrl + / when on the line in question and that line will have the language’s comment symbol added to it. If you select multiple lines, that’ll work as you expect too. You can do this on a blank line to start typing a new comment too.

Autoformatting #

It’s pretty easy to have your code get gross with mixed indentation types, weirdly wrapped lines, etc. Autoformatters are often a bit overly aggressive, but are helpful for keeping your code clean. For example, say we had this messy C:

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int main()
{
    for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++){if(i%2==1){
    printf("%d\n",i);
}
}
}

This is really awkward to read. Technically valid, but awkward. If we run it though an autoformatter it can turn it back into something reasonable:

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int main() {
    for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
        if (i % 2 == 1) {
            printf("d\n", i);
        }
    }
}

[TODO] Setting this up

Fonts! #

One thing you should notice about code editors is that they exclusively use fonts. This means that every character takes up the same amount of room. Most fonts don’t do this. This is really important for readability and editing code. Another important note is making characters very distinct. You don’t want to be confused if something is an i, I, l, L, or 1, or if it’s a 0, o, or O

Ligatures #

A few years ago, somebody had the neat idea of making fonts where if you type some common programming symbol combinations, they’ll visually turn into a symbol with the meaning. For example, != means “not equal” in almost every language, so, if you use a font that supports it, it will visually replace that combination of characters with a ≠ symbol (though, it’ll be two characters wide to keep it monospace but true to the actual length) - see https://www.programmingfonts.org/#firacode for an example. Try changing line 21 to be if (gutterClass != "CodeMirror-linenumbers") { and you’ll see what I’m talking about.

Multiple selections, symbol renaming, folding, etc. #

Multiple Selections & Folding #

Next up, I want to point out is using multiple selections at once. Go look at https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/codebasics and it’s one of the first things on the page. If you keep scrolling, eventually you’ll see Folding as well. That can be handy for large files - though you probably shouldn’t let files get that big to begin with.

Rearranging lines #

In code, the order you do things matters. If you have code like

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do_thing_a()
do_thing_b()

and you wanted it to be

do_thing_b()
do_thing_a()

You could cut and paste, or you could just do alt + with the cursor on the do_thing_b() line or alt + with the cursor on the do_thing_a() line. Either way, the point is you can move lines up and down as you please.

Symbol renaming #

[TODO] explaining what this is without having actually explained what a symbol is weird.

Colored Brackets #

First up is colored brackets. These will make it so each bracket pair is colored so it’s more obvious what goes with what, for example, with the above code:

int main() {
    for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
        if (i % 2 == 1) {
            printf("d\n", i);
        }
    }
}

Of course, this in addition to the other coloring that happens. The end result is that almost everything is colorful, which is a bit odd, but this change is worth it.

In VS Code, you can turn this on in File→Prefrences→Settings→"Editor: Bracket Pair Colorization: Enabled"

Code navigation #

There’s quite a few little tricks to navigate between code, but one you’ll want to know of for sure is the ability to control+click on a function name (we’ll get to what functions are eventually) and be brought to the code that makes it work. This is particularly helpful when that code is in another file - also something we’ll see later. So, just stow this little knowledge nugget away: ctrl+click a function name will bring you to the function’s code.


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