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Naming things well is arguably Job 1 for professional programmers. Yet we have all suffered from some bad naming choices from time to time. So just to vent a little, what are some doozies that you may have run across?


Just to get things started:

One of our original developers wasn't sure what to call a secondary key - on what turned out to be a primary table for this app - so he called it: DL2WhateverTheHellThatIs.

Unfortunately this system generates entity mappings from the XML, and attributes defined there result in classes, methods, and constants that are referenced through-out the app. To this day it is very hard to find a source file that does not reference this, er, thing! A few actual examples:

DL2WhateverTheHellThatIsBean cos = (DL2WhateverTheHellThatIsBean)itr.next();

String code = getDL2WhateverTheHellThatIs().getCode();

From from = new From("DL2WhateverTheHellThatIs");

String filter = "_dL2WhateverTheHellThatIs._code";

(Very difficult to refactor)

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83 Answers

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vote up 2 vote down

supercalifragilisticexpialidocious -- needless to say, this occurred before we had code reviews.

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vote up 8 vote down

While not the "worst" name, this one came to mind.

We have a class used to iterate objects called LOOPER. Here's a code fragment:

LOOPER theSuperDooperLooperScooper( drawing );

theSuperDooperLooperScooper.GetSelected ( GET_ONLY );
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vote up 0 vote down

Worked with a guy in FORTRAN days who named all his variables: AA1, AA2 etc. He didn't beliwve in continuation lines so he wrote:

AA1 = expression

then most often but not always on the next line:

AA1 = AA1 + expression

In C, functions named f(), c(), cc().

One I really liked was a flag named: AtLeastOneAntennaPulseInTheLastTenSeconds.

Regards, Bill Drissel

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vote up 0 vote down

PHP - in the middle of a controller file, subclassing some of the models:

class X extends Office {
    /* <snip 250 lines of function overloads > */
}

class y extends Employee {
    /* <snip another 250 lines> */
}

$instance = new y();

Absolutely no comments as to why x & y are sub-classing the models (or why it was necessary to do it in the middle of a controler given the pains we went to put in place a framework). The best thing is only one of the two classes are actually used - freelancers, gawd bless 'em …

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vote up 52 vote down

isHasDeletePrivilege. One tiny step away from canHasDeletePrivilege, leading me to suspect it may have been written by a cat.

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9  
canHazDeleetPrivlij, would be written by a cat. – Bill the Lizard Oct 7 '08 at 19:06
1  
Geez, making generated boolean accessor functions start with "is" isOneOfMyPetPeevesAboutCodeGenerators(). – Knobloch Jan 13 '09 at 17:27
1  
In Java boolean getters start with "is" so if you're using JSP or similar this property name will allow you to write code like form.hasDeletePrivilege. I suspect that's the reason for this name. – cletus Apr 10 at 11:48
vote up 43 vote down

A function to return a parentID of some product

<?php

    function whoIsYourDaddy($id)
    {
        return $this->parentID;
    }

?>
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5  
Yep, everyone knows object pointers are female, so the correct name would be whoIsYourMummy. – Gamecat Oct 2 '08 at 10:52
16  
Gamecat: You shouldn't objectify women like that. – chris Oct 17 '08 at 13:42
6  
Don't anthropomorphize computer constructs. They hate that. – Svante Jan 13 '09 at 17:36
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vote up 3 vote down

Anything that uses i, I, l, 1, o, O, or 0.

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2  
Easily solved by using a decent programming font. I like Consolas a lot, each of those characters are distinctly different in my editor. – Adam Lassek Oct 7 '08 at 16:18
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vote up 8 vote down

IsHardwareSoundPlaying_PleaseDontUseThis(). Called in at least 50 places in the code base, working perfectly.

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vote up 13 vote down

All variable names that "saves" you 2 or 3 keystrokes.

Like bta instead of beta, prmtr instead of parameter etc.

With intellisense you usually only need the first 3 letters anyway so why not use long descriptive names?

Who came up with this crap from the beginning btw? Was it the low-resolution displays that forced you to do this to get all code on one line or maybe language limitations?

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11  
Kind of ironic you use the acronym "btw" to save you a few keystrokes :) – Will Robertson Dec 19 '08 at 17:21
2  
Early linkers would only recognize the first 8 letters of an identifier, so they had to be distinctive in that range. Characters after that were pointless. – James Curran Dec 19 '08 at 18:09
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vote up 20 vote down

I have a coworker that routinely uses sentences for method names. For example:

LetsProceedWithHandlingTheErrorFromThatOneMethod()

(oh yeah, he begins lots of method names with "Lets")

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vote up 1 vote down

Using our graph-library, with JavaScript support for dynamic manipulation. No documentation provided:

doThatGraphThing( ... );

I laughed a bit, then went to have a talk with the developer, as this was release-code.

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vote up 0 vote down

In our World Series Baseball code for the Sega Genesis, we had a variable put in by an irate programmer whose name I can't quite type in here, but I think you'll get the idea:

int StupidFxxkingFlagThatSegaMakesUsFxxkingHave

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vote up 0 vote down

Toto

I maintained a project created by French developers and many local variables were named "toto". There were also some "koko", i think it's a derivative from "toto". I still have no idea what it means :)

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vote up 17 vote down

From the Windows 3.x kernel:

void FAR Bunny_351(void);
Long FAR PASCAL BozosLiveHere(HWND, WORD, WORD, DWORD);
WORD FAR PASCAL PrestoChangoSelector(WORD, WORD);

Bunny_351 is a an internal function called when windows shuts down. It's name was to honor a stuffed bunny that had an unfortunate accident with a paper shredder.

BozosLiveHere, a mysterious function that returns the string "USER: Invalid function called. System state potentially trashed,".

PrestoChangoSelector generates a code selector without validating the parameters so it is quicker than ChangeSelector.

Source: Undocumented Windows

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3  
According to Raymond Chen, "BOZOSLIVEHERE was originally the window procedure for the edit control, with the rather nondescript name of EditWndProc". He also explains why these names. Source: blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/… – CesarB Nov 12 '08 at 1:16
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vote up 11 vote down

I don't remember the actual collection name, but assMaster was named by my mentor on my last project (and he is a guy who doesn't swear).

foreach(var assMaster in assembly.LinkedAssemblies)
{
   ProcessTypes(assMaster)
}
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vote up 13 vote down

JesusBuysCookies()

Private method in an inhouse cookie handlig library.

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vote up 12 vote down

Anything prefixed with "My". We once hired a junior programmer who came up with such doozies as "MyClass", "MyInterface", and "MyMethod1". It was clear he was copying/pasting from a general tutorial (we later found it online), but couldn't be troubled to modify the sample.

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3  
MySQL? (what's with the lower character limit on comments, anyway...?) – Anders Sandvig Oct 7 '08 at 19:27
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vote up 0 vote down

Anything that doesn't describe the variable's content.

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vote up -3 vote down
i

I know, we all love using i for loops, but it's pretty much always the worst choice. Be more descriptive!

I hate seeing loops such as:

for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {
    for ($j = 0; $j < $i; $j++) {
            $k = $j * $i;
    }
}

It isn't readable, and it doesn't help anyone!

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1  
i ... as in integer? – palm3D Sep 28 '08 at 11:56
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vote up 2 vote down

Profanity... I won't type the example.

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1  
I had two cow-orkers who used to do this. They were very amused with themselves until they had to debug their own work. – Bill the Lizard Oct 7 '08 at 19:31
2  
Is orking cows illegal in your jurisdiction? – Jeffrey Hantin Apr 11 at 0:17
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vote up 5 vote down

I used to work with Powerbuilder and people keep naming variables var1, var2, var3, var4 ... etc. We usually had up to var20. It was hell (I resigned :) )

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vote up 5 vote down

There was a class called "HelperFunc" in one of the projects I have worked on. That class contained only static "helper" methods which had nothing in common - just a place to throw in random code.

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vote up 4 vote down

Single letter variable names.

float p, x, y;

because

 x = sqrt(p * p + y * y);

is much clearer than:

 hypotenuse = sqrt(edge1 * edge1 + edge2 * edge2);
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6  
I disagree. (Also, I'm surprised that this is the "worst" naming you've ever encountered.) Plenty of people have documented the rule "name length should be proportional to scope": jetcafe.org/jim/c-style.html#Naming A short function named "hypotenuse" doesn't need long names. – Rich Sep 28 '08 at 19:34
2  
What about single-variable names that correspond to conventions in standard mathematical notation? – dsimcha Nov 23 '08 at 2:04
2  
the only thing bad about that is that you're using p*p instead of x*x – Mark Apr 10 at 23:39
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