Hungarian Notation is a curse IMO, only of a bit of use in losely typed languages... but even still your member names should be descriptive enough to make it blatently obvious what datatype it would be (relative to the current environment)... obviously something like "loopCounter" or "i" isn't going to be a string.
David said:
the main thing to consider is consistency
That's where I'm coming from too, consistency across all lanauges even.
On 15/06/06,
Adam Burmister (DSL AK) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So I use PascalCase for classes and camelCase for ID's.
What's the benefits of using PascalCase for classes? It's not as if you
don't know which is which, "id=" and "class=" are pretty apparent.
I'd say camelCase for sure. But I have been brought up on C, C++, Java,
and I still insist on it in C#.
- A
________________________________________
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James Laugesen
Sent: Wednesday, 14 June 2006 3:56 p.m.
To: [email protected]
LOL hahah I stand corrected, thanks Kevin =8-)
PS For a bit of a giggle; when I first read your reply I thought "mmmm,
no no, I'm sure it's CamelCase, I'll just fire up wikipedia and chec...
oh yes, Wiki... WikiWiki... PascalCase... bugga".
On 14/06/06, Kevin Futter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 14/6/06 1:01 PM, "James Laugesen" < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I use CamelCase or "propper case" for CSS classes; just a habbit
(standard?) from OO programming; where classes (should) always be named
using CamelCase.
And I use lower-case first letter + upper case for ID's, as they are
unique for 1 HTML element only, they (IMO) represent a "variable", so
again, I follow my OO habbits (standards?) of lowerCaseFirstLetter.
Actually, "lowerCaseFirstLetter" is camelCase (not CamelCase - ever see
a camel with a hump on its arse?).
--
Kevin Futter
Webmaster, St. Bernard's College
http://www.sbc.melb.catholic.edu.au/
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