diff --git a/projects/TcpExample3/Client/TcpClient/src/tcpclient/TcpClient.java b/projects/TcpExample3/Client/TcpClient/src/tcpclient/TcpClient.java
index bb153b7af89afcaefc0917df1fee2998f82d18ad..2e804a4408ec3205eaf30243e7a83be80734e41d 100644
--- a/projects/TcpExample3/Client/TcpClient/src/tcpclient/TcpClient.java
+++ b/projects/TcpExample3/Client/TcpClient/src/tcpclient/TcpClient.java
@@ -1,60 +1,53 @@
-
 package tcpclient;
 
 import java.io.*;
 import java.net.*;
 
 /**
- * Before, we always used telnet to connect to the server.
- * Here we are now writing our own program to do the connection.
- * 
- * As you will see, when we run this after we start the server
- * we will see the same string telnet printed, sent by the server.
- * The output at the server will show different socket pairs for
- * each time we ran it.
- * 
+ * Before, we always used telnet to connect to the server. Here we are now
+ * writing our own program to do the connection.
+ *
+ * As you will see, when we run this after we start the server we will see the
+ * same string telnet printed, sent by the server. The output at the server will
+ * show different socket pairs for each time we ran it.
+ *
  * @author mcgredo
  */
 public class TcpClient {
 
 	public final static String LOCALHOST = "0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1"; // String constant, i.e. 127.0.0.1
-  
-    public static void main(String[] args) 
-    {
-        try
-        {
-          while(true)
-          {
-           System.out.println("creating socket");
-           
-           // We request an IP to connect to ("localhost") and
-           // port number at that IP (2317). This establishes
-           // a connection to that IP in the form of the Socket
-           // object; the server uses a ServerSocket to wait for
-           // connections.
-           Socket socket = new Socket(LOCALHOST, 2317); // locohost?
-           
-           // Read the single line written by the server. We'd
-           // do things a bit differently if many lines to be read
-           // from the server, instead of one only.
-           InputStream is = socket.getInputStream();
-           InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
-           BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
-           
-           String serverMessage = br.readLine();
-           System.out.println("==================================================");
-           System.out.println("Now we're talking!");
-           System.out.println("The message the server sent was " + serverMessage);
-		   // socket gets closed, either automatically/silently this code (or possibly by server)
-		 } // end while(true)
-        }
-        catch(IOException e)
-        {
-            System.out.println("Problem with client: "); // describe what is happening
-            System.out.println(e);
-        }
+
+	public static void main(String[] args) {
+		try {
+			while (true) {
+				System.out.println("creating socket");
+
+				// We request an IP to connect to ("localhost") and
+				// port number at that IP (2317). This establishes
+				// a connection to that IP in the form of the Socket
+				// object; the server uses a ServerSocket to wait for
+				// connections.
+				Socket socket = new Socket(LOCALHOST, 2317); // locohost?
+
+				// Read the single line written by the server. We'd
+				// do things a bit differently if many lines to be read
+				// from the server, instead of one only.
+				InputStream is = socket.getInputStream();
+				InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
+				BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
+
+				String serverMessage = br.readLine();
+				System.out.println("==================================================");
+				System.out.println("Now we're talking!");
+				System.out.println("The message the server sent was " + serverMessage);
+				// socket gets closed, either automatically/silently this code (or possibly by server)
+			} // end while(true)
+		} 
+		catch (IOException e) {
+			System.out.println("Problem with client: "); // describe what is happening
+			System.out.println(e);
+		}
 		// program exit: tell somebody about that
 		System.out.println("client exit");
-    }
-    
+	}
 }