An underscore is basically the only option here, seeing basically every
other operator imaginable is taken.

Still, I'm personally happy with the current convention of underscore_case
alongside squished case where it doesn't hurt readability.

I agree that things like `searchsortedlast` could probably be made a bit
clearer but short things like `isequal` are almost less readable (to me at
least) when they're made longer. The other thing that's nice about the
squished case option is that it does encourage you to avoid underscores,
i.e. by choosing a name that's concise and clear to begin with, ideally in
one word.

I'm sure opinions will vary, but just throwing my two cents in.

On 5 February 2015 at 19:12, David James <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello,
>
> The title of this post is "Moving Past a Squished Case Convention" not
> "Moving Pastas Quiche...". :)
>
> The Julia standard library tends to use the "squishedcase" notation. Being
> concise is great for mathematical functions, like sin, cos, and ln.
> However, it is cognitively harder for people for "compound" function names;
> e.g. "searchsortedlast". Such a naming convention flies in the face of real
> programming experience. It makes programming harder for people.
>
> There are many sane ways to name functions. Lisps tend to use hyphens,
> others often use underscores. R libraries use a non-standard mix [1].
> Interestingly, the Julia parser code itself uses hyphens; e.g.
> prec-assignment and prec-conditional:
> https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/blob/master/src/julia-parser.scm
>
> It would be a shame for squishedcase to persist as the language reaches
> 1.0. What are some possible ways to address this problem without breaking
> compatibility in the short-run?
>
> I see a possible solution. Choose a character and encourage its use to
> break apart words; e.g. -, _, or a middot (·) [2]. Make it highly
> recommended but non-breaking until 1.0. Deprecate
> functionsusingsquishedcase.
>
> Julia is great overall but lacking in this way. Let's make it better.
>
> Sincerely,
> David
>
> [1]
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1944910/what-is-your-preferred-style-for-naming-variables-in-r
>
> [2] The middot is relatively unobtrusive and doesn't take up much space
> horizontally, e.g. search·sorted·last. It is also useful for variables
> representing compound units; e.g. N·m.
>
>
>
>

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