En Tue, 07 Jul 2009 09:51:10 -0300, Jean-Michel Pichavant <jeanmic...@sequans.com> escribió:
I've never used sense in that way before, nor I've seen used by others until now. However Kj is right, and my dictionary seems wrong (wordreference.com). I've searched through others dictionaries and find out this is actually applicable to functions. My bad.

Using a common word with its common meaning is important too in order to understand the code. It's hard enough for students to grasp the algorithm itself, why make it artificially harder by using strange variable names.

Some years ago I had to endure using an in-house framework with names like bring_XXX and fix_XXX instead of the usual names get_XXX and set_XXX (that was C++, emulating properties; I'm not sure of the actual verbs used, perhaps "obtain" and "establish", but certainly not get/set/put). Add some undecipherable comments in spanglish, profuse usage of macros that alter the lexical appearance of the language, and even reading code was a torture.

--
Gabriel Genellina

--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to