Instagram Strikes a Sizable Blow in Silicon Valley’s Tabs Vs Spaces War

The latest season of Silicon Valley confronts one of the great questions of modern tech: tabs or spaces?

Richard Hendricks, the fictional startup founder at the heart of the HBO series, believes in tabs. That’s what he requires from his company’s coders—and the mother of his children. “I mean, like, what? We’re going to bring kids into the world with this hanging over their head?” he tells the Facebook coder he’s (sorta) dating, after she types a long row of spaces into her laptop.

“Kids?” she responds. “We haven’t even slept together.”

“And guess what? That’s never going to happen now,” he says. “Because there’s no way I’m going to be with someone who uses spaces over tabs.”

Per usual, the show exaggerates its portrait of the modern tech world—but only slightly. When writing software code, some people indent with tabs, because it’s quicker than typing a long string of spaces and it uses less digital storage space.

But others indent with spaces, because different text editors format tabs in different ways, which changes how the code looks as it moves from machine to machine. And all this is more than mere trivia. In the real Silicon Valley, seemingly inconsequential technical choices play a sizeable role in the progress of Internet startups—if not the progress of semi-romantic relationships.