User forums > Using Code::Blocks

what is that line?

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tiwag:

--- Quote from: Vampyre_Dark on May 02, 2006, 05:17:47 pm ---Yeah, way to treat your users!  :lol: Those Dumbasses, how dare they not know what that vertical line was called!

--- End quote ---
Those darn dumb-asses, which always need to have the last words ...  :D

Vampyre_Dark:

--- Quote from: tiwag on May 02, 2006, 05:26:38 pm ---
--- Quote from: Vampyre_Dark on May 02, 2006, 05:17:47 pm ---Yeah, way to treat your users!  :lol: Those Dumbasses, how dare they not know what that vertical line was called!

--- End quote ---
Those darn dumb-asses, which always need to have the last words ...  :D

--- End quote ---
Oh come now now. Off the high horse. You act like you you don't have time to write a one word answer telling him 'gutter' but you have time to write that uneeded paragraph at the end telling him he's an idiot. How is hew supposed to find the option to turn it off when he didn't know it was called the gutter.

Maybe he could have looked in the help file.. oh wait..

thomas:

--- Quote from: Vampyre_Dark on May 02, 2006, 05:17:47 pm ---Those Dumbasses, how dare they not know what that vertical line was called!
--- End quote ---
That's actually not surprising, since it is not the gutter at all. Gutter is an entirely different thing.

Anyway, that's how we call it in the prefereces :)

VReality:
Thank you Thomas.

I've never seen it called a 'gutter' anywhere else.  I believe the gutter is in the left margin where the break-point markers and the program pointer show up.  I've seen the line in question referred to as the 'right margin' elsewhere.

Not that CodeBlocks needs to be exactly the same as everyone else, but maybe the Editor Settings menu could be updated for clarity?

thomas:

--- Quote ---I believe the gutter is in the left margin where the break-point markers and the program pointer show up.
--- End quote ---
That's right, this is how the word is generally used in text editors. Another meaning for gutter is the "inner" margin of a page in a book (i.e. the right margin on a left side and the left margin on a right side).

Scintilla calls that line "edge", I would call it "silly line at 80 characters", but neither of these is really a good naming :)
I am not even sure what it is good for, formatting for a fixed printer width? (the last time I printed out sources was around 1985, when thermal printers and 9 pin dotwriters were still considered state of the art, so I wouldn't know :)).

"Right margin" as you said might still be the best choice, even though "margin" suggests that it breaks lines going beyond (which is not the case).

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