David McAfee
davidmcafee at gmail.com
Mon Nov 14 16:28:32 CST 2011
I still use it (or a variation of it), even in other languages. On Mon, Nov 14, 2011 at 2:23 PM, David Emerson <newsgrps at dalyn.co.nz> wrote: > Here is a related question to variable names. I read somewhere that > Hungarian naming convention is not now supported by Microsoft and they > prefer not to include the type as a prefix. What could be the reason for > this? I know there are more tooltips to help identify a variable but this > is no help if you are looking at printed code. > > David > > > At 15/11/2011, David McAfee wrote: > >> :) >> >> One of my pet peeves is when variables are used that are the opposite case >> of a reserved word. >> >> >> String string = "StRiNg"; >> >> >> >> On Mon, Nov 14, 2011 at 1:21 PM, Stuart McLachlan <stuart at lexacorp.com.pg >> >wrote: >> >> > Here we go, grab your tin hats everyone and duck for cover :-) >> > >> > -- >> > Stuart >> > >> > On 14 Nov 2011 at 13:15, David McAfee wrote: >> > >> > > Shamil, why do you prefer case sensitivity? >> > > >> > > That is one of my most common mistakes when developing in C, C#, Java, >> > > Android(Java). >> > > >> > > Just wondering, >> > > >> > > David >> > > >> > > On Mon, Nov 14, 2011 at 1:05 PM, Salakhetdinov Shamil < >> mcp2004 at mail.ru >> > >wrote: >> > > >> > > > Hi Dan -- >> > > > >> > > > > I do prefer VB for at least one reason: >> > > > > VB is not case sensitive while C# is. >> > > > I'm not arguing - that's funny: I, personally, dislike VB.NETbecause it >> > > > is *not* case sensitive :) (And I have been programming using >> VBA/VB6 for >> > > > 10+ years). >> > > > I can provide my reasoning but would it make any difference there? >> > > > >> > > > Thank you. >> > > > >> > > > -- Shamil >> > > > >> > > > >> > > > 14 2011, 18:29 "Dan Waters" <df.waters at comcast.net>: >> > > > >> > > > > I do prefer VB for at least one reason: VB is not case sensitive >> while C# >> > > > > is. For example, the variable 'stgPerson' in VB is the same as >> when you >> > > > > type 'stgperson'; VB will change the case for you. But C# sees >> 'stgPerson' >> > > > > and 'stgperson' as two separate variables, and I don't see how >> that would be >> > > > > helpful. >> > > > > >> > > > > Good Luck! >> > > > > Dan >> > > ______________________________**_________________ > dba-VB mailing list > dba-VB at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/**mailman/listinfo/dba-vb<http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-vb> > http://www.databaseadvisors.**com <http://www.databaseadvisors.com> > >