If the line starts with the tab character, I can configure VS Code to show it as either two or four (or any other number) spaces, so the same code can have different indentation space in your machine than in mine.
If I configure VS Code to set two spaces every time I press tab, it is unfortunately not possible for somebody who prefers four spaces indentation to visualise the code that way.
In VSCode there are options like setting the tabs equal to a number of spaces, or you can even have tab insert spaces, I believe.
In other words, Iām not sure what you mean. š
If the line starts with the tab character, I can configure VS Code to show it as either two or four (or any other number) spaces, so the same code can have different indentation space in your machine than in mine.
If I configure VS Code to set two spaces every time I press tab, it is unfortunately not possible for somebody who prefers four spaces indentation to visualise the code that way.
This is the first time any part of this discussion has made sense to me. š¤©