• 0

.NET Controls naming convention


Question

Hello, I am new to .NET programming. There is a set of naming convention in Java, for example, methodName for method name, CONTNT for constants. I want to know if there is also a set of naming conventions for .NET controls, such as textbox, labels, data grid...etc?

Thank you very much! :)

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/785788-net-controls-naming-convention/
Share on other sites

Recommended Posts

  • 0

You can name them anything you like. But having consistency is a great component.

Examples, for labels I use LBL_#CONTROL# and text boxes TXT_#CONTROL#

Just simple things like that, and if you have a tabbed or multi-window application, you can use something like LBL_TB2_#CONTROL# for a label on the second tab.

Thats how I roll anyway.

  • 0

The way I was taught in college is something like textBoxUserName (for a textbox control) but I completely ignored it. Instead I just use Hungarian notation which is a lot faster yet still easy to interpret. Hungarian notion is simply stuff like lblName for a label, txtName for a textbox, cboName for a combobox, lstName for a listbox, etc... That's a pretty common practice. As for non .NET control naming conventions there's a little guide on MSDN: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xz...28VS.71%29.aspx

This site: http://www.anticipatingminds.com/Content/p...wledgePack.aspx which references that MSDN page seems to suggest that you add the name of the control at the end of the field name. For example, a textbox for a person's first name would be "firstNameTextBox". To me that seems ridiculous as it is extra typing and simple 3 letter abbreviations seem to work perfectly fine.

Edited by dlegend
  • 0

We name our UI controls to be as self documenting as any other variable. The only exception is that they are prefixed with 'ux' indicating they are part of the user experience. We toyed with 'ui' but it didn't look as good depending on the rest of the control name. So if I had a textbox fir a user first name and property to hold the value, I might have something like uxFirstName.Text = myCLass.FirstName. We never use the control type in the control name anymore except in cases of lists and grids and even in those cases, the control name indicates the data, not the control such as uxStateList (combo) or uxMemberClaimsGird (datagridview). The benefit of the 'ux' prefix is that all controls are listed in inteillisense together.

  • 0

Systems Hungarian Notation has really fallen out of favor now. Microsoft officially recommends that you shouldn't use it.

  Quote
Do choose easily readable identifier names. For example, a property named HorizontalAlignment is more readable in English than AlignmentHorizontal.

Do favor readability over brevity. The property name CanScrollHorizontally is better than ScrollableX (an obscure reference to the X-axis).

Do not use underscores, hyphens, or any other nonalphanumeric characters.

Do not use Hungarian notation.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms229045.aspx

  • 0
  sbauer said:
Systems Hungarian Notation has really fallen out of favor now. Microsoft officially recommends that you shouldn't use it.

Yes, I've heard this as well but I still prefer to use it. Does anyone know why it's not recommended? I think it's simple and effective.

  • 0

I have been using a dirivative of the Hungarian for over a dozen years. Can someone explain the logic on why this format should not be used?

After all, looking at txtFirstName, strFirstName give more info and context that just FirstName. If I am reviewing code and see FirstName how am I to know, on sight, if that is a variable, a control or a function?

  • 0
  jakem1 said:
Yes, I've heard this as well but I still prefer to use it. Does anyone know why it's not recommended? I think it's simple and effective.

It's a form of commenting and comments lie. It's just redundant.

To be honest, I've never understood the love affair with Hungarian notation and .net. Why do you think it's simple and effective?

  • 0

I use the same as garethevans1986

In Delphi I used hungarian. In C# I use things like textBoxFirstName, checkBoxRememberPassword

I basically just delete the number that gets suffixed on the end of the new control and replace it with the text. It makes for some long control names, but I know exactly what something is.

Unfortunatley the design guidelines don't include control naming, so you're stuck coming up with your own.

  • 0
  jameswjrose said:
After all, looking at txtFirstName, strFirstName give more info and context that just FirstName. If I am reviewing code and see FirstName how am I to know, on sight, if that is a variable, a control or a function?

FirstName would be a horrible name for a method. It doesn't even have a verb in it.

  • 0
  sbauer said:
It's a form of commenting and comments lie. It's just redundant.

To be honest, I've never understood the love affair with Hungarian notation and .net. Why do you think it's simple and effective?

If I see a control called txtFirstName I instantly know that it's a textbox that is used to store first names. I can also use the same notation for variables (e.g. strFirstName is a string used to store first names) which makes my code self documenting and easy to read/write. That's what I like about it.

Out of interest, what do you use?

  • 0
  jakem1 said:
If I see a control called txtFirstName I instantly know that it's a textbox that is used to store first names. I can also use the same notation for variables (e.g. strFirstName is a string used to store first names) which makes my code self documenting and easy to read/write. That's what I like about it.

This is what I'm talking about. Completely redundant. strFirstName? Yeah, of course it's a string. It's a first name. What else could it be? It's not going to be a bool. It's not going to be an int.

Descriptive variable names that reveal intent will often save you from the redundancy that is Hungarian notation (and bad code commenting in general).

  Quote
Out of interest, what do you use?

Variable names that reveal intent. That's all.

  • 0
  The_Decryptor said:
Ehh?

First you say it's bad, then it's good, or am I just confused? ("strFirstName" is Hungarian notation)

I'm saying it's bad. I'm saying strFirstName is bad.

  Quote
This is what I'm talking about. Completely redundant. strFirstName? Yeah, of course it's a string. It's a first name. What else could it be? It's not going to be a bool. It's not going to be an int.
  • 0
  sbauer said:
This is what I'm talking about. Completely redundant. strFirstName? Yeah, of course it's a string. It's a first name. What else could it be? It's not going to be a bool. It's not going to be an int.

Descriptive variable names that reveal intent will often save you from the redundancy that is Hungarian notation (and bad code commenting in general).

strFirstName may be a bad example because first name is going to be a string. What about a user ID? It could be a string or an integer for example. strUserID or intUserID works perfectly and reveals usage and intent.

Why are you being so obtuse? At the end of the day this all just comes down to personal/team preference. There are no rules as long as the solution you choose is logical and meaningful. I'm happy to put up with a couple of strFirstName type names to make the most of an intUserID.

  • 0
  sbauer said:
This is what I'm talking about. Completely redundant. strFirstName? Yeah, of course it's a string. It's a first name. What else could it be? It's not going to be a bool. It's not going to be an int.

Descriptive variable names that reveal intent will often save you from the redundancy that is Hungarian notation (and bad code commenting in general).

The 'str' is not redundant, it is there to show it's a string and not a control eg edFirstName would be an edit control.

  • 0
  jakem1 said:
strFirstName may be a bad example because first name is going to be a string. What about a user ID? It could be a string or an integer for example. strUserID or intUserID works perfectly and reveals usage and intent.

1) Once I realize the standard, I would never need to carry the baggage around throughout the entire application.

User user = new User();

user.strUserID = "B192" <-- ugly.

Or 2) I would put my mouse over the variable name.

Or 3) Develop a standard where UserID = int/guid, UserNumber = string

Seriously, though, you're going to add a ton of extra baggage to your code just so you can see what type the ID is without having to think?

  Quote
Why are you being so obtuse? At the end of the day this all just comes down to personal/team preference. There are no rules as long as the solution you choose is logical and meaningful. I'm happy to put up with a couple of strFirstName type names to make the most of an intUserID.

I'm not being obtuse. The original poster asked for advice, and he got a lot of advice that I didn't agree with. Therefore, I'm going to share my opinion. My opinion isn't completely different. Microsoft, Robert Martin (author of Clean Code), and Linus Torvalds all share the same opinion when in comes to Systems Hungarian notation.

I realize it's a team preference. My team used sourcesafe before I came. That, like this, was a team preference, but it certainly wasn't the best option.

  • 0
  Mike said:
The 'str' is not redundant, it is there to show it's a string and not a control eg edFirstName would be an edit control.

Why do you even use IDEs? Use App Hungarian notation for the ui components, but don't pollute other stuff. Or what purpose is the strFirstName serving as a private field within the page or ui form?

  • 0
  sbauer said:
Why do you even use IDEs? Use App Hungarian notation for the ui components, but don't pollute other stuff. Or what purpose is the strFirstName serving as a private field within the page or ui form?

I use IDEs to make the building process easier and so I don't need to manually add new files to be built etc.

The whole 'hover over a variable to see what type it is' is a bad idea. Why? Because it means you (personally) don't know what the variable type is.

The strFirstName variable could be the result of a simple edFirstName->GetText() call and the resultant string could be used to show a message or whatever. If you just had FirstName for the edit control, what would the variable be called that took the string?

  • 0
  Mike said:
The whole 'hover over a variable to see what type it is' is a bad idea. Why? Because it means you (personally) don't know what the variable type is.

That doesn't make any sense. You don't know the type either. You're just guessing the type is the same as the prefix. The prefix is a comment. That's all it is. If someone changed the type on you without refactoring the variable name, you'd be wrong.

  Mike said:
The strFirstName variable could be the result of a simple edFirstName->GetText() call and the resultant string could be used to show a message or whatever. If you just had FirstName for the edit control, what would the variable be called that took the string?

Fine. Break out the Apps Hungarian notation, and prefix all the controls with a ui prefix. string firstName = uiFirstName.Text. That's an OK standard. I would never pollute my code with the typical Systems Hungarian notation crap, though.

Edited by sbauer
  • 0
  sbauer said:
That doesn't make any sense. You don't know the type either. You're just guessing the type is the same as the prefix. The prefix is a comment. That's all it is. If someone changed the type on you without refactoring the variable name, you'd be wrong.

No i'm not guessing, the prefixes are chosen for a reason. They aren't just some random letters. If someone did change the type and didn't change the prefix they would end up with a sore backside.

  sbauer said:
Fine. Break out the Apps Hungarian notation, and prefix all the controls with a ui prefix. string firstName = uiFirstName.Text. I would never pollute my code with the typical Systems Hungarian notation crap.

The 'ui' prefix doesn't help with distinguishing the type. It's a similar case with prefixing global variables so you know that if you change it some place, it won't just be your code that is affected.

  • 0
  Mike said:
No i'm not guessing, the prefixes are chosen for a reason. They aren't just some random letters. If someone did change the type and didn't change the prefix they would end up with a sore backside.

I know they're not some random letters. I get the concept. I just don't believe in it. I think the investment is not worth what you get back.

  Quote
The 'ui' prefix doesn't help with distinguishing the type. It's a similar case with prefixing global variables so you know that if you change it some place, it won't just be your code that is affected.

Yeah, I don't care about that either. I don't want type information in my variable names. It's unnecessary and wasn't what Hungarian notation was designed to be.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I have not heard of that name in a while. I stopped reading his content and listening to him some time ago.
    • Consumer Reports is flat out wrong. Wouldn't be the first time it's a fact that when you have more moving parts, you have more room for failure. Less points of failure when all you replace on an EV is the tires and the wipers.
    • WYSIWYG Web Builder 20.2.2 by Razvan Serea Web Buialder is a WYSIWYG (What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get) program used to create complete web sites. WYSIWYG means that the finished page will display exactly the way it was designed. The program generates HTML (HyperText Markup Language) tags while you point and click on desired functions; you can create a web page without learning HTML. Just drag and drop objects to the page position them "anywhere" you want and when youre finished publish it to your web server (using the build in Publish tool). Web Builder gives you full control over the content and layout of your web pages. One Web Builder project file can hold multiple web pages. Desktop publishing for the web, build web sites as easy as Drag & Drop "One Click Publishing" No FTP program needed. No special hosting required, use with any Hosting Service! Easily create forms using the built-in Form Wizard plus Form validation tools and built-in CAPTCHA. Advanced graphics tools like shapes, textart, rotation, shadows and many other image effects. Fully integrated jQuery UI (Accordion, Tabs etc), animations, effects and built-in ThemeRoller theme editor. Google compatible sitemap generator / PayPal eCommerce Tools Many navigation tools available: Navigation bars, tab menus, dropdown menus, sitetree, slidemenus. Built-in Slide Shows, Photo Galleries, Rollover images, Banners etc. Support for YouTube, Flash Video, Windows Media Player and many other video formats. Unique extension (add-on) system with already more than 250 extensions available! Create HTML5 / CSS3 websites today HTML5 document type (optimized HTML5 output). HTML5 audio/video and YouTube HTML5 support. HTML5 forms: native form validation, new input types and options, web storage. HTML5 canvas and svg support in shapes and other drawing tools. CSS3 @font-face. Use non web safe fonts in all modern browsers. CSS3 opacity, border radius, box shadow. CSS3 gradients. Add cool gradient effects using native CSS3 (no images). CSS3 navigation menu. Create awesome menus without using JavaScript or images. CSS3 animations and transitions. Including support for 2D and 3D transforms! Features for advanced users: Login Tools/Page Password Protection. Built-in Content Management System with many plug-ins (guestbook, faq, downloads, photo album etc). Add custom HTML code with the HTML tools. JavaScript Events: Show/hide objects (with animation), timers, move objects, change styles etc. Layers: Sticky layer, Docking layer, Floating layer, Modal layer, Anchored layer, Strechable layer and more! jQuery Theme Manager, create your own themes for the built-in jQuery UI widgets. Style Manager (global styling, H1, H2, H3 etc). Master Frames and Master Objects: reuse common element in your website. and much more! WYSIWYG Web Builder 20.2.2 changelog: Improved: Minor change in HTML formatting of the Overlay Menu. Fixed: Issue with aspect ratio of HTML Video. Download: WYSIWYG Web Builder 64-bit | 30.1 MB (Shareware) Download: WYSIWYG Web Builder 32-bit | 28.0 MB Screenshot: >> Click here << Link: Home Page | Templates | Free extras/addons | Changelog Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • You are like that narcissistic moron and his name is Paul Thurrott.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Collaborator
      Mighty Pen went up a rank
      Collaborator
    • Week One Done
      emptyother earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      DarkWun earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      valkyr09 earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Week One Done
      suprememobiles earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      568
    2. 2
      +FloatingFatMan
      188
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      177
    4. 4
      Skyfrog
      111
    5. 5
      Xenon
      110
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!