Abdelrazak Younes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | Lars Gullik Bjønnes wrote: | > Abdelrazak Younes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | > | Lars Gullik Bjønnes wrote: | > | > Abdelrazak Younes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | > | > | | Do you mean this one: | > | > | | > - Long variables are named like thisLongVariableName. | > | > | | So without the trailing underscore then? | > | > No. Private class member variables get a _ at the end. | > | | Where is that written? And what about protected member? | > No _. | | Too bad... How do you handle the case where you need an access method | then? This won't work: | | public: | OneType oneType() { return oneType; } | | protected: | OneType oneType; | | I think we need the trailing underscore for protected members. Another | solution is to ban protected members.
yes. that would be nice. | > | So you see it's difficult to extract a clear figure from this code and | > | I would say that the "one_type_" style is used quite often... | > Yes, we have gotten confused by boost and stl/std. | | So I reckon you want to stick with: | - "oneMethod()" style for member methods. | - "oneType_" for private member variable | - "oneType" style for protected member variable. This one need more | discussion. right. -- Lgb