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So I am working on this class that's suppose to request help documentation from a vendor through web service. I try to name it DocumentRetriever, VendorDocRequester, DocGetter, but they just doesn't sound right. I ended up browsing through dictionary.com for half an hour trying to come up with an adequate word.

Start programming with bad names is like having a very bad hair day in the morning, the rest of the day goes down hill from there. Feel me?

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vote up 1 vote down

I think this is a side effect.

It's not the actual naming that's hard. What's hard is that the process of naming makes you face the horrible fact that you have no idea what the hell you're doing.

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I definitely feel you. And I feel your pain. Every name I think of just seems rubbish to me. It all seems so generic and I want to eventually learn how to inject a bit of flair and creativity into my names, making them really reflect what they describe.

One suggestion I have is to consult a Thesaurus. Word has a good one, as does Mac OS X. That can really help me get my head out of the clouds and gives me a good starting place as well as some inspiration.

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For me I don't care how long a method or class name is as long as its descriptive and in the correct library. Long gone are the days where you should remember where each part of the API resides.

Intelisense exists for all major languages. Therefore when using a 3rd party API I like to use its intelisense for the documentation as opposed to using the 'actual' documentation.

With that in mind I am fine to create a method name such as

StevesPostOnMethodNamesBeingLongOrShort

Long - but so what. Who doesnt use 24inch screens these days!

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vote up 0 vote down

Not really. Considering all the difficult things you have to understand in coding, saying that naming classes and methods is one of the most difficult things in programming is preposterous. Don't get me wrong, it's sometimes hard to think of a good name but let's be real here. I'll go as far to say that it's one of the easiest parts of programming.

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vote up 0 vote down

Just summarize the method/class in 'One Word', answering what it mean for? And there should be no equivalent for that word.

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vote up 3 vote down

One lesson I heave learned, is that if you can't find a name for a class, there is almost always something wrong with that class:

  • you don't need it
  • it does too much
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If you are a .NET developer I strongly recommend reading the BradA, Cwalina book - Framework Design guidelines. Its all explained there.

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vote up 2 vote down

In short:
I agree that good names are important, but I don't think you have to find them before implementing at all costs.

Of course its better to have a good name right from the start. But if you can't come up with one in 2 minutes, renaming later will cost less time and is the right choice from a productivity point of view.

Long:
Generally it's often not worth to think too long about a name before implementing. If you implement your class, naming it "Foo" or "Dsnfdkgx", while implementing you see what you should have named it.

Especially with Java+Eclipse, renaming things is no pain at all, as it carefully handles all references in all classes, warns you of name collisions, etc. And as long as the class is not yet in the version control repository, I don't think there's anything wrong with renaming it 5 times.

Basically, it's a question of how you think about refactoring. Personally, I like it, though it annoys my team mates sometimes, as they believe in never touch a running system. And from everything you can refactor, changing names is one of the most harmless things you can do.

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vote up 0 vote down

I find its easier to choose a name once something is finished. Refactor->Rename ftw.

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vote up 2 vote down

I was just writing on naming conventions last month: http://caseysoftware.com/blog/useful-naming-conventions

The gist of it:

verbAdjectiveNounStructure - with Structure and Adjective as optional parts

For verbs, I stick to action verbs: save, delete, notify, update, or generate. Once in a while, I use "process" but only to specifically refer to queues or work backlogs.

For nouns, I use the class or object being interacted with. In web2project, this is often Tasks or Projects. If it's Javascript interacting with the page, it might be body or table. The point is that the code clearly describes the object it's interacting with.

The structure is optional because it's unique to the situation. A listing screen might request a List or an Array. One of the core functions used in the Project List for web2project is simply getProjectList. It doesn't modify the underlying data, just the representation of the data.

The adjectives are something else entirely. They are used as modifiers to the noun. Something as simple as getOpenProjects might be easily implemented with a getProjects and a switch parameter, but this tends to generate methods which require quite a bit of understanding of the underlying data and/or structure of the object... not necessarily something you want to encourage. By having more explicit and specific functions, you can completely wrap and hide the implementation from the code using it. Isn't that one of the points of OO?

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vote up 1 vote down

There is only one sensible name for that class:

HelpRequest

Don't let the implementation details distract you from the meaning.

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vote up 24 vote down

A good naming convention should minimize the number of possible names you can use for any given variable, class, method, or function. If there is only one possible name, you'll never have trouble remembering it.

For functions and for singleton classes, I scrutinize the function to see if it's basic function is to transform one kind of thing into another kind of thing. I'm using that term very loosely, but you'll discover that a HUGE number of functions that you write essentially take something in one form and produce something in another form.

In your case it sounds like your class transforms a Url into a Document. It's a little bit weird to think of it that way, but perfectly correct, and when you start looking for this pattern, you'll see it everywhere.

When I find this pattern, I always name the function xFromy.

Since your function transforms a Url into a Document, I would name it

DocumentFromUrl

This pattern is remarkably common. For example:

atoi -> IntFromString
GetWindowWidth -> WidthInPixelsFromHwnd // or DxFromWnd if you like Hungarian
CreateProcess -> ProcessFromCommandLine

You could also use UrlToDocument if you're more comfortable with that order. Whether you say xFromy or yTox is probably a matter of taste, but I prefer the From order because that way the beginning of the function name already tells you what type it returns.

Pick one convention and stick to it. If you are careful to use the same names as your class names in your xFromy functions, it'll be a lot easier to remember what names you used. Of course, this pattern doesn't work for everything, but it does work where you're writing code that can be thought of as "functional."

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@Brian: it's only redundant in one place... at the declaration. Everywhere else you use it, it's nice to have a little reminder of the data types. Makes code more readable without having to go back to the declaration. – Joel Spolsky Jan 8 at 16:31
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@stefan- In some languages such C# and Java all code must be encapsulated in an a class unlike in C++. Functions are not quite first class citizens in those languages if you want modularize code. Therefore, you sometimes end up with class that might "do" things like a function. – Ray Vega Jan 8 at 18:23
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Leo Brodie, in his book "Thinking Forth", wrote that the most difficult task for a programmer was naming things well, and he stated that the most important programming tool is a thesaurus.

Try using the thesaurus at http://thesaurus.reference.com/.

Beyond that, don't use Hungarian Notation EVER, avoid abbreviations, and be consistent.

Best wishes.

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Shouldn't the vendor documentation be the object? I mean, that one is tangible, and not just as some anthropomorphization of a part of your program. So, you might have a VendorDocumentation class with a constructor that fetches the information. I think that if a class name contains a verb, often something has gone wrong.

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vote up 2 vote down

I actually just heard this quote yesterday, through the Signal vs. Noise blog at 37Signals, and I certainly agree with it:

"There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation and naming things." — Phil Karlton

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Don't forget design patterns (not just the GoF ones) are a good way of providing a common vocabulary and their names should be used whenever one fits the situation. That will even help newcomers that are familiar with the nomenclature to quickly understand the architecture. Is this class you're working on supposed to act like a Proxy, or even a Façade ?

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vote up 1 vote down

I find I have the most trouble in local variables. For example, I want to create an object of type DocGetter. So I know it's a DocGetter. Why do I need to give it another name? I usually end up giving it a name like dg (for DocGetter) or temp or something equally nondescriptive.

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If 8 out of 10 people understand it, then you can safely assume that it is understandable and readable and clear. There will always be those 1 or 2 nit pickers that will try and fault you for no reason other than that they are petty.

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What I do is check if it's to long if I can't remember it to long

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vote up 1 vote down

The language you use to describe the problem, is the language you should use for the variables, methods, objects, classes, etc. Loosely, nouns match objects and verbs match methods. If you're missing words to describe the problem, you're also missing a full understanding (specification) of the problem.

If it's just choosing between a set of names, then it should be driven by the conventions you are using to build the system. If you've come to a new spot, uncovered by previous conventions, then it's always worth spending some effort on trying extend them (properly, consistently) to cover this new case.

If in doubt, sleep on it, and pick the first most obvious name, the next morning :-)

If you wake up one day and realize you were wrong, then change it right away.

Paul.

BTW: Document.fetch() is pretty obvious.

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vote up 11 vote down

The book Code Complete by Steve Mcconnell has a nice chapter on naming variables/classes/functions/...

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DocumentFetcher? It's hard to say without context.

It can help to act like a mathematician and borrow/invent a lexicon for your domain as you go: settle on short plain words that suggest the concept without spelling it out every time. Too often I see long latinate phrases that get turned into acronyms, making you need a dictionary for the acronyms anyway.

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vote up 0 vote down

Another reason why every software developer should have writing and communication skills.

PD: I believe a vast vocabulary is also important.

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vote up 3 vote down

More so than just naming a class, creating an appropriate package structure can be a difficult but rewarding challenge. You need to consider separating the concerns of your modules and how they relate to the vision of the application.

Consider the layout of your app now:

  • App
    • VendorDocRequester (read from web service and provide data)
    • VendorDocViewer (use requester to provide vendor docs)

I would venture to guess that there's a lot going on inside a few classes. If you were to refactor this into a more MVC-ified approach, and allow small classes to handle individual duties, you might end up with something like:

  • App
    • VendorDocs
      • Model
        • Document (plain object that holds data)
        • WebServiceConsumer (deal with nitty gritty in web service)
      • Controller
        • DatabaseAdapter (handle persistance using ORM or other method)
        • WebServiceAdapter (utilize Consumer to grab a Document and stick it in database)
      • View
        • HelpViewer (use DBAdapter to spit out the documention)

Then your class names rely on the namespace to provide full context. The classes themselves can be inherently related to application without needing to explicitly say so. Class names are simpler and easier to define as a result!

One other very important suggestion: please do yourself a favor and pick up a copy of Head First Design Patterns. It's a fantastic, easy-reading book that will help you organize your application and write better code. Appreciating design patterns will help you to understanding that many of the problems you encounter have already been solved, and you'll be able to incorporate the solutions into your code.

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vote up 1 vote down

Nope, debugging is the most difficult thing thing for me! :-)

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When every sensible name seems too long or ambigious, you can try using something a little less sensible, e.g.:

  • class GoForHelpLassie
  • class DunnoAskTechSupport
  • class RTFVM [where V is for Vendor]

Make sure the name is really unique and there is a descriptive comment at the top of the class, because anyone who sees it in the code is going to need to look it up to find out what it does (but when they do, they'll probably find it easier to remember).

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vote up 6 vote down

Thread 1:

function programming_job(){
    while (i make classes){
         Give each class a name quickly; always fairly long and descriptive.
         Implement and test each class to see what they really are. 
         while (not satisfied){
            Re-visit each class and make small adjustments 
         }
    }
}

Thread 2:

while(true){
      if (any code smells bad){
           rework, rename until at least somewhat better
      }
}

There's no Thread.sleep(...) anywhere here.

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vote up 28 vote down

What you are doing now is fine, and I highly recommend you stick with your current syntax, being:

context + verb + how

I use this method to name functions/methods, SQL stored procs, etc. By keeping with this syntax, it will keep your Intellisense/Code Panes much more neat. So you want EmployeeGetByID() EmployeeAdd(), EmployeeDeleteByID(). When you use a more English syntax such as GetEmployee(), AddEmployee() you'll see that this gets really messy if you have multiple Gets in the same class as unrelated things will be grouped together.

I akin this to naming files with dates, you want to say 2009-01-07.log not 1-7-2009.log because after you have a bunch of them, the order becomes totally random.

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I prefer to have context inferred from type name when naming methods... class EmployeeRepository { void Add(Employee employee); void Get(int id); void GetAll(); void GetAll(Action<FilterCriteria> filter); } What do you think? – Vyas Bharghava Jan 7 at 23:40
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Richard you are correct in OOP scenarios, my answer pulled back a bit and was more of a general coding suggestion. I guess technically it applies more towards non OOP languages. Employee.Add() and Employee.GetByID() would be the best usage in OOP. – TravisO Jan 8 at 14:56
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It usually feels very natural to me. I always make very short methods, never more than 6 lines of Smalltalk code (automatically formatted), so I really don't have any trouble saying what this method is about.

Sometimes class names are difficult, because the word I want to choose is in use somewhere in the system, because sometimes the same word has different meanings in separate contexts. I wish that in those cases, some Wikipedia-like syntax would be allowed, so i could name my class "Task (To do list item)". Until that is legal, I make a large German-style word out of it: ToDoListItemTask. You might have guessed it: My method names can be very long, too. But I think they are readable.

So, in your case, your class is a "getter", or retriever, or whatever. Are you sure that this should be modelled in class? Shouldn't rather the vendor doc be able to request itself? Something like vendorDoc.requestFrom(source); would be easier to name, wouldn't it?

cheers,

niko

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I feel your pain. :/

I wish there were a tool for reviewing source code in conjunction with a data dictionary (a file describing the various variable / method names, I guess sort of like javadoc), so you could write code like this:

class Battery 
{
   double I; // current
   double T; // temperature
   double V; // voltage
   double Q; // charge

   void update(double Inew, double dt) { I = Inew; Q += I*dt; }
   // ... etc ...
};

and the code-reviewing tool could do a number of different things to make it easier to view code in context, including display reminders that I = current (e.g. in a pane on the right-hand-side of the window it would display variable definitions/semantics/comments for the place in the code you are clicking on), or even allow you to do "virtual refactoring" where as a code reviewer you could rename something to your liking for readability/display reasons without actually changing the code stored on disk.

As much as I like self-describing names, I hate reading things like BatteryFilteredCurrentInMilliamps. Often in embedded systems we are modeling objects based on algebraic equations and names like that in equations get very cumbersome. (on the other hand, an "I" with a hat on top and a subscript "d" and a superscript "*" is rather confusing.)

I'm an EE / systems engineer first with minor software responsibilities and in the end I really don't care what a variable is named as long as I have a convenient way of telling what it is, and mapping it into my own internal model of the system being controlled.

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