Naming is hard. Very hard. Possibly the hardest part about building software.
And it only gets harder as the size of the codebase grows, since there are far more naming collisions. Code scales very, very badly. Do not make it worse than it has to be.
This is why naming things correctly is such a fundamental skill for all programmers.
Coding itself is oddly the second most important skill. If you write good code but bury it under a misleading name, then it doesn’t exist. You haven’t done your job. Eventually, you’ll forget where you put it. Other people can’t even find it. Tools like fancy IDEs do not save you from that fate.
There are no one-size-fits-all naming conventions that always work correctly. More pointedly there can never be such a convention. Naming is not mindless, you have to think long and hard about it. You cannot avoid thinking about it.
The good news is that the more time you spend trying to find good names, the easier it gets. It’s a skill that takes forever to master, but at least you can learn to not do it badly.
There are some basic naming rules of thumb:
First is that a name should never, ever be misleading. If the name is wrong, it is as bad a name as possible. If someone reads it and comes to the wrong conclusion, then it is the author's fault. When you name something you have to understand what that thing is and give it the best possible name.
Second is that the name should be self-describing. That is, when someone reads the name, they should arrive at the right conclusion. The variable should hold the data they expect. The function should do what it says. The repo that holds a given codebase should be obvious.
“Most people never see the names I use in my code …”
No, they do see them. All of them.
And if they see them and they are poor or even bad, they will recommend that your code gets rewritten. They will throw away your work. Nothing else you did matters. If the code is unreadable, it will not survive. If it doesn’t survive, you aren't particularly good at your job. It’s pretty simple.
Occasionally, some really awful code does get frozen way deep in a ball of mud. But that unfortunate situation is not justification for you being bad at your job. Really, it isn’t.
Third, don’t put litter into your names. Made up acronyms, strange ‘pre’ or ‘post’ text. Long and stupid names are not helping. Stop typing in long crazy names, spend some time to thinking about it. Find short reasonable names that are both descriptive and correct.
Fourth, don’t put in irrelevant or temporary stuff in there either. If some unrelated thing in an organization changes and now the name is either wrong or needs to be changed, you did it wrong. Names should be nearly timeless. Only if the nature of the problem changes, should they need changing, and you should do that right away. Names that used to be correct suck.
Names are important. They form the basis of readability, and unreadable code is just an irritant. If you were asked to really write some code, you need to really write it properly. If it takes longer, too bad. Good naming only slows you down until you get better at it. You need to be better at it.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for the Feedback!