digitalmars.D - Re: d assigns name Philosophy
- dolive <dolive89 sina.com> Apr 30 2009
- "Denis Koroskin" <2korden gmail.com> Apr 30 2009
- dolive <dolive89 sina.com> Apr 30 2009
Andrei Alexandrescu д:dolive wrote:bearophile д:dolive:Suggest the d Language and phobos lib ( And other lib ) assigns name to use the tallest phrase in the phrase of word frequency . This, should study toward the java . This is also the key that the java jdk source code easily reads This is also one of the java successful keys . thank you very much !
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf%27s_law I agree. Bye, bearophile
yesis so
I'm not very sure. That would suggest using exceedingly common names (the, on, go, do, be, and, use...) which are often imprecise because they are used in a variety of contexts (hence their frequency). I often prefer a word that has a precise meaning. Andrei
Ok, has a precise meaning is a premise. when have more than two phrases, choosing high that of use the tallest phrase in the phrase ( Function name ) of word frequency . For example: getData and fetchData. the choice getData
Apr 30 2009
On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 23:24:24 +0400, dolive <dolive89 sina.com> wrote:Andrei Alexandrescu дµ½:dolive wrote:bearophile дµ½:dolive:Suggest the d Language and phobos lib ( And other lib ) assigns
This, should study toward the java . This is also the key that the java jdk source code easily readsThis is also one of the java successful keys . thank you very much !
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf%27s_law I agree. Bye, bearophile
yes£¬is so
I'm not very sure. That would suggest using exceedingly common names (the, on, go, do, be, and, use...) which are often imprecise because they are used in a variety of contexts (hence their frequency). I often prefer a word that has a precise meaning. Andrei
Ok, has a precise meaning is a premise. when have more than two phrases, choosing high that of use the tallest phrase in the phrase ( Function name ) of word frequency . For example: getData and fetchData. the choice getData
No offense, but I can't believe someone who knows very little of English makes naming suggestions to native language speakers. Maybe there is no difference between get and fetch to you, but there sure is for others. I believe there are cases when one name is preferable over another for clarity.
Apr 30 2009
Denis Koroskin д:On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 23:24:24 +0400, dolive <dolive89 sina.com> wrote:Andrei Alexandrescu дµ½:dolive wrote:bearophile дµ½:dolive:Suggest the d Language and phobos lib ( And other lib ) assigns
This, should study toward the java . This is also the key that the java jdk source code easily readsThis is also one of the java successful keys . thank you very much !
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf%27s_law I agree. Bye, bearophile
yes£¬is so
I'm not very sure. That would suggest using exceedingly common names (the, on, go, do, be, and, use...) which are often imprecise because they are used in a variety of contexts (hence their frequency). I often prefer a word that has a precise meaning. Andrei
Ok, has a precise meaning is a premise. when have more than two phrases, choosing high that of use the tallest phrase in the phrase ( Function name ) of word frequency . For example: getData and fetchData. the choice getData
No offense, but I can't believe someone who knows very little of English makes naming suggestions to native language speakers. Maybe there is no difference between get and fetch to you, but there sure is for others. I believe there are cases when one name is preferable over another for clarity.
Sorry, my right and wrong English nation of, also not too acquaint with to English, so there will be such suggestion choosing high that of use the tallest phrase in the phrase ( Function name ) Hope to use the most in common use most in simple use most in easy use phrase thanks
Apr 30 2009