with apples in that list for example, you used '2.1' to indicate a new item, the space is cosmetic, the functional indicator is '2.1'
This wouldn't look right:
Introduction
Fruit
Apples
Red apples
Green apples
I'm sure you can work it out, but it doesn't feel natural, or ideal. (i can't get hn to format it without making it all one line so i used double new line).
it would look better still with a dash or a bullet point for every sub-entry. We're not arguing that it is possible to do that, we're arguing what is ideal for readability.
In that list you can naturally guess what that ordering is, but if the items were not so interrelated it can be confusing. if the top level item is 'Ham' and the indented item under it is 'sandwich' are you wrapping the same phrase 'Ham Sandwich' , because indentation (even in python) is used when wrapping lines, or is sandwich under ham as one of the things done with ham. it is thus error-prone and more confusing, clear and specific punctuation alongside indentation makes it easier to read.
No one is saying that indentation can not be used to display lists/sublists, I'm saying that markers remove ambiguity even across movement of blocks of texts.