Thanks for the points.
What I was thinking, was that for things like π, in Clojure (as in CL),
perhaps it makes to sense to mark it like so:

+pi+

On Sat, Feb 21, 2009 at 8:59 PM, Chouser <chou...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> On Sat, Feb 21, 2009 at 5:36 PM, David Nolen <dnolen.li...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > My point is simply that whether something is immutable or not has nothing
> to
> > do with how that data structure is being used in the program.
> > Naming conventions signify usage.  You could write a pure Java
> > program and make it pretty darn functional. You would still want to
> > mark values that are logically treated as constants as such.
>
> Most named Vars are given a single value and this is never changed at
> all.  They are created with 'def' or some variation thereof, and then
> examined in various ways, but not given new values.  They are constant
> and they are named in the normal Clojure way: lowercase with dashes.
>
> Sometimes these Vars are changed later with another 'def', but this is
> meant to be a development or debugging technique, not something that
> should be incorporated into normal program logic.  Anticipating this
> kind of change (or not) shouldn't influence the name of the Var.
>
> Some named Vars are expected to be given a thread-local value with
> 'binding', and in even more rare cases then adjusted using 'set!'.
> This usage is unusual enough that the names of such Vars warrant the
> *earmuffs*.
>
> Even less commonly than any of the above is changing a Var's root
> value with 'alter-var-root'.  This is perhaps unusual enough that it
> warrants a naming convention to indicate that this particular Var will
> actually be non-constant at its root.
>
> Is there some other distinction that needs to be made?  Does logically
> constant mean something different from what I've described above?
>
> --Chouser
>
> >
>

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