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I know what Hungarian refers to - giving information about a variable, parameter, or type as a prefix to its name. Everyone seems to be rabidly against it, even though in some cases it seems to be a good idea. If I feel that useful information is being imparted, why shouldn't I put it right there where it's available?

See also: Do people use the Hungarian naming conventions in the real world?

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I tend to use Hungarian Notation with ASP.NET server controls only, otherwise I find it too hard to work out what controls are what on the form.

Take this code snippet:

<asp:Label ID="lblFirstName" runat="server" Text="First Name" />
<asp:TextBox ID="txtFirstName" runat="server" />
<asp:RequiredFieldValidator ID="rfvFirstName" runat="server" ... />

If someone can show a better way of having that set of control names without Hungarian I'd be tempted to move to it.

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I cannot find a link but I remember reading somewhere (which I agree with) that avoiding Hungarian notation results in better programming style.

When you program a statement of your program, you should not be thinking about "what type this object is" before calling its method, but rather you should think "what do I want to do with it", "which message to send to it".

Kind of vague concept to explain, but I think it works.

For example, if you have customer name stored in variable customerName, you should not care if it is a string or some other class. More important to think what do you want from this object. Do you want it to print(), getFirstName(), getLastName(), convertToString() etc. Once you make it an instance of String class and take it as granted, you limit yourself and your design since you have to build up all other logic you need elsewhere in the code.

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For years I used Hungarian notation in my programming. Other than some visual clutter and the task of changing the prefix when I changed the data type, no one could convince me otherwise. Until recently--when I had to combine existing C# and VB.NET assemblies in the same solution.

The result: I had to pass a "fltSomeVariable" to a "sngSomeVariable" method parameter. Even as someone who programs in both C# and VB.NET, it caught me off guard and made me pause for a moment. (C# and VB.NET sometimes use different names to represent the same data type--float and single, for example.)

Now consider this: what if you create a COM component that's callable from many languages? The VB.NET and C# "conversion" was easy for a .NET programmer. But what about someone that develops in C++ or Java? Does "dwSomeVariable" mean anything to a .NET developer not familiar with C++?

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If you don't know the type of a variable without being told, you probably shouldn't be messing with it anyways

The type might also not be that important. If you know what the methods do, you can figure out what is being done with the variable and then you'll what the program is doing

There may be times you want it; when type is important and the declaration isn't near or the type can't be inferred with ease. But it should never be seen as absolute

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