Looking at this question, I tried OP\'s the code on my machine. Here are a text version and a screenshot:
Easy!
def square(x):
runningtotal = 0
for counter in range(x):
runningtotal = runningtotal + x
<tab>return runningtotal
First, tabs are replaced (from left to right) by one to eight spaces such that the total number of characters up to and including the replacement is a multiple of eight <...>
So this tab at the last line is replace with 8 spaces and it gets into the loop.
For Python indenting - a tab
is counted as equivalent to 8 spaces
Since people almost never have their tab width set to 8 spaces, it's never a good idea to mix the two.
Like many people, I used to prefer tabs for indenting, but found that it is a constant source of confusion when emailing code or posting in forums, etc. Which is what has happened here
The most common thing these days is to just have the tab key in your editor insert 4 spaces.
The point is that Python has to respect tabs because of backward compatibility, but it's not a good idea to use them anymore.
As mentioned by @Fredrik, there is the -t
option from the man page
-t Issue a warning when a source file mixes tabs and spaces for indentation in a way that makes it depend on the worth of a tab expressed in spaces. Issue an error when the option is given twice.
Here the return runningtotal
has a tab.
$ python -tt
Python 2.7.4 (default, Apr 19 2013, 18:28:01)
[GCC 4.7.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> def square(x):
... runningtotal = 0
... for counter in range(x):
... runningtotal = runningtotal + x
... return runningtotal
File "<stdin>", line 5
return runningtotal
^
TabError: inconsistent use of tabs and spaces in indentation