For my own projects I have adopted the Apple Coding Conventions. During my time writing a decent amount of Objective-C code I came to love the self documenting nature of well written Objective-C code and the Cocoa library.
So in C++ I have stuck with the spirit of these conventions because in my opinion they improve readability and on several occasions getting the name right also helped me think through what the code needs to do.
SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE:
FRAMES_PER_SECOND
PascalCase:
ClassName
camelCase:
descriptiveMethodName()
positionX
Underscore:
_isGameOver
Private/Protected/Public:
private:
protected:
public:
Apple Convention Examples:
- Clarity and brevity are both important, but clarity should never be sacrificed for brevity.
bgColor(r, g, b, a)
A little more typing to do but the increase in clarity is usually worth it.
backgroundColorWithAlpha(red, green, blue, alpha)
- Avoid names that are ambiguous.
There are too many examples to mention of this, but consider the introductory code examples from nearly any tutorial. Meaningful names increase clarity and reduce programmer error.
i vs index
x vs meaningfulName
posX vs positionX
I understand there are historical reasons for names like i, x, j, and hWPTR but in my opinion there is no reason to do them and they are awful for teaching.
Microsoft code examples (copied and repeated forever) are some of the worst offenders.
szStr
oObj
Seriously?!
Of course when collaborating with a team I am happy to adopt whatever the standard is. I want my code to look like it belongs to the project. The one thing that does make me twitch a little are weird braces.
K&R braces are the only correct braces. :)
bool hasComponents() {
....
}