Conventions/code/naming: Difference between revisions
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* '''dx''': an integer position (typically of a string) | * '''dx''': an integer position (typically of a string) | ||
* '''f''': floating-point number | * '''f''': floating-point number | ||
** Was also used for functions, but I have changed to '''fx'' for that. | ** Was also used for functions, but I have changed to '''fx''' for that. | ||
* '''ft''': formatted (meaning marked-up) text string (could be HTML, could be wikitext...) | * '''ft''': formatted (meaning marked-up) text string (could be HTML, could be wikitext...) | ||
* '''fx''': function variable (function stored in a variable, as in {{l/htyp|PHP/function variable}}) | * '''fx''': function variable (function stored in a variable, as in {{l/htyp|PHP/function variable}}) | ||
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** Some older code uses "Values". | ** Some older code uses "Values". | ||
** Note that a Cell can sometimes be a {{l/ferreteria/|varstat}} object. | ** Note that a Cell can sometimes be a {{l/ferreteria/|varstat}} object. | ||
The distinction between Set and Use really only comes into play within named value-sets (arrays of various sorts where each element has a sematically-significant name). | * '''Create''': construct a new object, always | ||
* '''Build''' is mostly synonymous with "create" but implies that the process may be more complex | |||
* '''Make''' means "build/create if that hasn't already been done, and return the object" | |||
The distinction between "Set" and "Use" really only comes into play within named value-sets (arrays of various sorts where each element has a sematically-significant name). | |||
==Namespace Aliases== | ==Namespace Aliases== |
Latest revision as of 15:46, 5 October 2023
I tend to use the following naming conventions within my code.
Prefixes
These are more or less in keeping with the Apps (original) variation of Hungarian notation.
Variable Prefixes
- dl: an integer length (typically of a string)
- dx: an integer position (typically of a string)
- f: floating-point number
- Was also used for functions, but I have changed to fx for that.
- ft: formatted (meaning marked-up) text string (could be HTML, could be wikitext...)
- fx: function variable (function stored in a variable, as in PHP/function variable)
- ht: HTML string
- k or K: a constant, i.e. anything whose value should not (or cannot) change once defined
- n: a count (int; use f for float)
- o: object
- or: a ref object (see Value Types)
- os: a status object (see Value Types)
- s: string
- sc: string that is the name of a class
- sq or sql: string formatted as SQL, or safe to be used within SQL
- url: string formatted as a complete URL
- uri: string formatted as a URI, i.e. part of a URL
- wt: wikitext-formatted string (in whatever wiki markup is applicable)
Possibly all numbers should start with n and then the type: ni, nf, nc
see also General Affixes
Type Prefixes
- c: class
- ca: abstract class (cannot be instantiated)
- cn: class that is a wrapper for the results of a native function
- cs: static class (not intended to be instantiable; all methods static)
- cb: callback function (used in the function name itself, rather than in variables referring to it)
- ch: a string that is always a single character
- f: [DEPRECATED; use namespaces instead]: a Ferreteria class/trait/interface
- if: interface
- t: trait
- ta: trait that introduces abstract functions (so any class using it will become abstract unless it implements them)
- ts: trait that introduces static functions
I wanted to use "c1" (cee-one) as a prefix for singleton classes (i.e. a class for which there should never be more than one object), but it looks too much like "cl" (cee-ell) or possibly a typo, so I dropped that idea. (For future exploration: maybe "co" would work.)
General Affixes
In the prefix but not necessarily as the first characters:
- db: a database
- rc: a single-record class/object
- rs: a recordset class/object
- t: a table class/object
These may be used in declarations or variable names, but are generally used only for classes and objects. For classes, the c
prefix comes first; for objects, these replace the o
prefix, and sometimes may be the entire name of the variable.
Value Types
- actual means a reference-container object
- I prefer this to "reference" where possible. It's shorter, less misleading (all PHP variables are references), and correctly implies that the entity in question is the actual thing and not a copy.
- cell means access to a value in a named location (e.g. an array element)
- ref is another shorthand for "reference"; see "actual".
- slug means a string which can unambiguously represent any expected value or state of a given item
- needed for representing record IDs in URLs, where one possible state is "new" (no ID yet)
- status means a presence-info object
- preferably descended from cThingHolder
- unit means something that knows its own name and has awareness of its container-object/structure
- preferably a PortRow Unit object
- value means a read-only value, assumed to exist (throws error if not)
Actions
I try to be consistent with the shades of meaning in affixes within function names. Newer code is better about this than older code.
- Get: retrieve a value or value-set; should not change anything
- Set: overwrite a value or value-set; in the case of a named value-set, existing values not written by corresponding input values should be cleared/erased
- Use: include the following value(s) in the target value-set; existing values will be preserved unless overwritten by an eponymous input
- [verb]Array: just copy the given array, don't process individual elements
- [verb]Cells: handle individual elements
- Some older code uses "Values".
- Note that a Cell can sometimes be a varstat object.
- Create: construct a new object, always
- Build is mostly synonymous with "create" but implies that the process may be more complex
- Make means "build/create if that hasn't already been done, and return the object"
The distinction between "Set" and "Use" really only comes into play within named value-sets (arrays of various sorts where each element has a sematically-significant name).
Namespace Aliases
When creating an alias for a namespace, I use capital letters to indicate that the namespace is an alias. (For a little while, I only used caps for parents of the current namespace, but this got confusing and made code less portable.)
Examples:
use ferret as F;
use ferret\data as FD;
I've established conventions for certain frequently-needed types of namespace aliases, to make it easier to copy/paste code for new classes:
- _PC: namespace of the parent class for the main class in this file
- _P or _PF: parent namespace, i.e. namespace's parent folder -- e.g. for
ferret\data\bank
,_P
would beferret\data
. - _FEAT: the namespace for the main Feature class (Ferreteria-specific)