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  3. How many people use fubar?

How many people use fubar?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • L Lost User

    I tend to come up with more descriptive names - pays dividends when I do maintenance :-D Paul ;)

    That's better! It looks like radioactive waste now. - Ryan Binns

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    Tom Archer
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    Agreed. This point is exactly why when I consult for a company, I always preach the mantra "Code is read more than it is written". Cheers, Tom Archer Inside C#,
    Extending MFC Applications with the .NET Framework

    // Thanks to Atlantys
    if (PostType == AnythingDistastful
    || PostType == AnythingOld)
    {
    if ((rand() % 2) == 0)
    { /* make fun of VB */ }
    else
    { /* make fun of COBOL */ }
    }

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    • K keegan

      I have a tendency to use the acronymn all the time in my code, instead of naming something 'temp' ill use foo or bar. I even saw foo used on a c++ test i took last year. Im just wondering how often professional programmers use it, if ever, or its just a little joke that people hint at but never use. the origin of fubar [^] *.* cin >> knowledge;

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      John M Drescher
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      I never use either. I usually name variables using hungarian notation and selfdocumentation unless they are just iterators.. John

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      • I Ian Darling

        Fortunately, it was when I was at uni, and he was in a different year to me :-D -- Ian Darling

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        John M Drescher
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        I see this kind of thing all the time in research...

        feature56 = feature34 + feature23;

        It does serve one unintended purpose. No one but the author could possiblly understand the code without months of study... John

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        • D David Chamberlain

          I never caught on to using fubar, foo, or bar in any combination. I guess it was too abstract to be of any help to me, but of course, that was its purpose. Use foo when you intentionally don't want to be specific about something. Now, it has become one of those fingernail-on-the-blackboard things for me, and I hate using it and really dislike even seeing it. You won't ever see it in anything I write. Dave "You can say that again." -- Dept. of Redundancy Dept.

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          Turtle Hand
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          :rolleyes: a little tense about this. tell us how you really feel! ;) Josef Wainz Software Developer

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          • C Chris Losinger

            i don't use foobar. i generally use "bob". it's easier to type than "foobar". -c CheeseWeasle

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            Turtle Hand
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            fred is the way to go. bob is reversible. but fred you'll never be confused which way to read the variable. i've been naming things fred for 15 years, go figure. Josef Wainz Software Developer

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            • T Tom Archer

              Impressive, Ravi. Congrats on the nice work. Cheers, Tom Archer Inside C#,
              Extending MFC Applications with the .NET Framework

              // Thanks to Atlantys
              if (PostType == AnythingDistastful
              || PostType == AnythingOld)
              {
              if ((rand() % 2) == 0)
              { /* make fun of VB */ }
              else
              { /* make fun of COBOL */ }
              }

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              RaviBeeR Offline
              RaviBee
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              Thanks, Tom! :rose: PS: Check your email. /ravi Let's put "civil" back in "civilization" Home | Articles | Freeware | Music ravib@ravib.com

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