First one are method name, second one are status name.
def open_file_dialog(self):
self.dialog_file_open = True
pass
Yoda level preference war.
Welcome to Programmer Humor!
This is a place where you can post jokes, memes, humor, etc. related to programming!
For sharing awful code theres also Programming Horror.
First one are method name, second one are status name.
def open_file_dialog(self):
self.dialog_file_open = True
pass
Yoda level preference war.
I tend to add is to booleans toreally differentiate between a method name and a status.
def open_file_dialog(self):
self.dialog_file_is_open = True
pass
That way, it's easier for my dumb brain to spot which is which at a glance.
is_dialog_file_open
fite me
No fiting. IS always goes at the start of names for booleans you are correct
Lol mutable state
Where's file_dialogue_open
I'm truly torn with this. The first one seems sensible (action -> target) and easier to read and reason about (especially with long names), while the other one looks more organized, naturally sortable and works great with any autocompletion system.
We need a new framework, one that allows universal lookup, and makes life easier
x = _.dialog.file.open
y = _.open.file.dialog
z = _.file.open.dialog
a = _.file.dialog.open
Once done, the formatter simply changes everything to _.open.file.dialog
Let's get this done JS peeps
\s
First of all, it's spelled dialogue
There is a reason why little endian is preferred in virtually 100% of cases: sorting. Mentally or lexicographically, having the most important piece of information first will allow the correct item be found the fastest, or allow it to be discounted/ignored the quickest.
That's actually filtering not sorting.
That being said, it's more valuable (to me) to be able to find all my things for a topic quickly rather than type.
Foo_dialog
Foo_action
Foo_map
Bar_dialog
Bar_action
Bar_map
Is superior IMHO.
If you are looking for Bar
, it is highly likely that you are already looking specifically for a particular functionality - say, the action
- for Bar
. As such, it is irrelevant which method you use, both will get you to the function you need.
Conversely, while it is likely you will want to look up all items that implement a particular functionality, it is much less likely you are going to ever need a complete listing of all functionality that an item employs; you will be targeting only one functionality for that item and will have that one functionality as the primary and concrete focus. Ergo, functionality comes first, followed by what item has that functionality.