IIUC, bozhidar was requesting that the dots be aligned to the dot above (as opposed to being indented by only 2 spaces). He didn't say what should happen if one of the lines has multiple dots in it. The linked github comment does explicitly request the aligning to the last dot, but it's the only comment that requests that on a very long discussion that was largely focused on a different topic (whether or not to use trailing dots). Bozhidar, do you have an opinion on this? Artur On Wed, 22 Aug 2018 at 09:50, Dmitry Gutov wrote: > On 8/22/18 2:36 PM, Artur Malabarba wrote: > > 1. (setq ruby-align-chained-calls t) > > 2. (setq ruby-use-smie t) > > 3. Open a file in ruby-mode, insert the following and indent it > > > > ---------- > > some_variable.where.not(x: nil) > > .where(y: 2) > > ---------- > > > > Expected behaviour: Nothing would happen, the code is already properly > > indented. > > > > What actually happens: The code gets indented as follows > > > > ---------- > > some_variable.where.not(x: nil) > > .where(y: 2) > > ---------- > > > > Note that this is conflicts with the indentation enforced by rubocop. > > I'd like to point out that this is exactly the behavior Bozhidar asked > for, back when this variable was introduced. See: > > http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2014-01/msg01802.html > > and in particular the Example 1 in the referenced comment: > > > https://github.com/rubocop-hq/ruby-style-guide/pull/176#issuecomment-18664622 > > So we even have a test (ruby-align-chained-calls) that check that the > alignment is do to the last dot, and not to the first one. >