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#
# EditorConfig: http://EditorConfig.org
#
# This files specifies some basic editor conventions for the files in this
# project. Many editors support this standard, you simply need to find a plugin
# for your favorite!
#
# For a full list of possible values consult the reference.
# https://github.com/editorconfig/editorconfig/wiki/EditorConfig-Properties
#
# Stop searching for other .editorconfig files above this folder.
root = true
# Pick some sane defaults for all files.
[*]
# UNIX line-endings are preferred since:
# * git prefers them
# * servers run on Linux
# * most developers use Mac OS X
# http://adaptivepatchwork.com/2012/03/01/mind-the-end-of-your-line/
end_of_line = lf
# No reason in these modern times to use anything other than UTF-8.
charset = utf-8
# Ensure that there's no bogus whitespace in the file.
trim_trailing_whitespace = true
# A little esoteric, but it's kind of a standard now.
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/729692/why-should-files-end-with-a-newline
insert_final_newline = true
# Herein be the apex of holy wars. For more information see:
# http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/57
indent_style = space
# Personal preference here. Smaller indent size means you can fit more on a line
# which can be nice when there are lines with several indentations.
indent_size = 2
# Prefer a more conservative default line length – this allows editors with
# sidebars, minimaps, etc. to show at least two documents side-by-side.
# Hard wrapping by default for code is useful since many editors don't support
# an elegant soft wrap; however, soft wrap is fine for things where text just
# flows normally, like Markdown documents or git commit messages. Hard wrap
# is also easier for line-based diffing tools to consume.
# See: http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/54140
max_line_length = 80
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