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Re^2: About the use of the plural form for the name of variables (Perl Best Practices best practices)by tye (Sage) |
on Nov 08, 2012 at 15:17 UTC ( [id://1002921]=note: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
I think great, but its not a table, use %veg :) Excellent point. Hmm, Perl Best Practices for naming variables says use %vegetable in the singular This made me chuckle. It lead to me imagining Dr. Conway digging his own grave just so he could roll over in it. I know he went to a lot of effort to provide justifications for each "rule" he included. And I know he went to a lot of effort to document that his intent was not to have people blindly parroting rules without considering the justifications and whether or not each applied to their particular environment / situation / style, etc. And yet, the vast majority of references to Perl Best Practices that I see are cases of people blindly parroting rules from it. (Perl::Critic is perhaps the most egregious example of this.) But I give you points for providing a link. The link did include a justification: Damian also recommends naming hashes in the singular, the idea being that individual accesses seem more natural: $vegetable{spinach}. Note that I already said that I don't mind having the pluralizing 's' (or other suffix) being immediately followed by a "one of" syntax element (like [1] or {spinach}). They end up right next to each other and so I find no confusion results. But I also find $vegetable{spinach} to be an example of a lousy use of a variable name. What are you tracking about vegetables, including spinach? Which of the things that you are tracking do I get back from $vegetable{spinach} ? I guess you might have a bunch of Whatever::Vegetable objects, which would make the name less bad. I've seen a recommendation to use prepositions in the names of hash variables. For example, my %vegetable_obj_from_name;. But I realize that I relatively rarely have multiple hashes indexing into the same space of values. So I'm more likely to go with your advice of "It is a variable of limited scope, give it a name that is somewhat mnemonic but also short and thus faster to type and even to read... like %veg". Thanks for the reality check and for the chuckle. (: - tye
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