82

How do we name a dictionary variable?

Say in my method I have Dictionary<string, List<string>> dictionary;, where the keys of the dictionary are country names and the values are lists of province/state names. How should I rename dictionary?

I know we can create a Country class for this example. But please don't mention this alternative because I'm thinking of good naming convention here.

2
  • 1
    You can think of a dictionary as a mapping function or you can think of it more specifically as a hashing/lookup/index function. Mapping is more general. Consider a math function that maps Celsius to Fareheit which could be named ConvertCelsiusToFarenheit. "To" emphasizes that the input space/set is the focus. Y-By-X better captures that a dictionary is a specific type of mapping that uses set-based hashing. "By" emphasizes that the output space/set is the focus. A key is worthless unless it unlocks something. Just my opinion, but I hope it helps give some insight.
    – VoteCoffee
    Dec 22, 2014 at 13:53
  • Another quick note, you want to capture what it is for, not what what it does: a real dictionary is for looking up definitions by words. It's true that it maps some words to their definitions, but this doesn't capture intent as well.
    – VoteCoffee
    Dec 22, 2014 at 13:58

6 Answers 6

133
ProvincesByCountry
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  • 4
    It's not an established convention, as far as I know. It just seemed like a good and concise solution for the case at hand.
    – Heinzi
    Dec 11, 2014 at 6:40
  • 2
    I would think it's because FooByBar makes appending Map or Dictionary to the name redundant. I think the difference between By and To is By means you are mapping an id/key/field of something to the thing itself, whereas To means you are mapping two similarly complex objects to each other. If the collection is like a Lookup but with only one value, then I'd use By. If the collection resembles a linguistic dictionary then I'd use To.
    – Novaterata
    Apr 2, 2015 at 14:16
  • 2
    thanks for this. slick solution. I was dreading ending it with dictionary/Map and this is perfect.
    – basher
    Oct 6, 2016 at 15:48
  • 2
    This comes from sql server naming conventions FYI, which is a natural reference for naming conventions of collections. Other alternatives would be CountryToProvince, or something more explicit of the relationship that the dictionary represents, such as ProvinceInCountry, CountryOfProvince, etc. It's also better to use the singular form of the key/value entities.
    – VoteCoffee
    Nov 4, 2019 at 15:07
  • 3
    In some cases, we can use Per instead of By. Ex: RulesPerTenant
    – user1234
    Apr 8, 2021 at 20:33
26

I use mostly one of these:

  • CountryToStatesDictionary
  • CountryToStatesMap
  • CountryToStatesMapping
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  • 7
    like FrenchToEnglish dictionary. Oct 18, 2012 at 1:55
11

ProvincesByCountry is not explicit enough, as it sounds like mapping countries to provinces one to one. When accessing ProvincesByCountry["Germany"] I'd expectedly assume one value is an object rather than a list of objects.

My personal pattern is similar:

[Plural of a noun describing the value]By[Singular of a noun describing the key]

However, if a noun describing the value is plural by its nature, then I use the postfix arrays, or lists, as in English you can't really "pluralise" a plural. I personally always stick to arrays, regardless of the actual implementation of IEnumerable or IEnumerable< T> I'm using, be that List, or Array or whatever.

In your case it turns to:

ProvinceArraysByCountry

Tells what it is with scientific precision.

I apply this rule recursively if there are dictionaries as values. The order of accessing then goes in reverse to the order of words in the name. Imagine you add planets:

ProvinceArraysByCountryByPlanet["Earth"]["Germany"][0] = "Bavaria"
ProvinceArraysByCountryByPlanet["Earth"]["Germany"][1] = "Rhineland-Palatinate"

And finally the last little stroke here. If such dictionary maps object properties and the objects themselves, then I leave out the word describing the object in the key section. Here is what I mean:

NodesByIndex[node.Index] = node; // - Do
NodesByNodeIndex[node.Index] = node; // - Don't

I use this pattern unconditionally which is good as it leaves absolutely no room for guess. Con is it generates fairly long names sometimes. But I have no idea how to have always explicit but always short names. You always have to compromise. And it's of course a matter of taste.

This pattern doesn't work (or at least you'd break your brain) when keys are also dictionaries or when you have list of dictionaries of lists of dictionaries or some other crazy exotic stuff. But I don't remember having that many levels of nesting, so I'm happy with it.

3
  • code completion and wide monitors have been a great boon to meaningful variable names Apr 2, 2015 at 20:39
  • 4
    As I have seen in Microsoft's source code they use the Collection postfix. So I would say ProvinceCollectionsByCountry or maybe a more specialized name: ProvinceCollectionsByCountryName.
    – Gabor
    Feb 8, 2017 at 15:14
  • 'Provinces', being a plural, already matches the expectation that the value will be a collection. If it were a mapping of single values, you could rather have ProvinceByCountry / ProvinceForCountry / CountryToProvince. It may look odd to you given your personal pattern, but it's quite quick to adjust to.
    – entonio
    Feb 14 at 17:55
9

I like XtoYMap or YFromX.

4

Naming is always contextual. So in this specific case some name specifying the country to state mapping is appropriate.

if this was just a device for a loop within a larger context and then discarded, I normally just go with a short temp type var like...

var dict = GetCountryStateMapping();
foreach(var item in dict)
{
  //Something....
}
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  • 16
    Reminds me of a IT joke... "There are only 2 hard problems in computer science, naming things, cache invalidation and Off by 1 errors."
    – Tim Jarvis
    Dec 2, 2010 at 1:05
  • OK. But what if I want this be used as a property?
    – Shuo
    Dec 2, 2010 at 1:08
  • 2
    Ah, then in that case you have a context and a scope, the parent class (along with the contents) and its lifetime. In that case Naming is much easier. As I said, naming is always contextual. In that case, RegionByCountry or StateByCountry or ProvinceByCountry etc would be most appropriate IMO.
    – Tim Jarvis
    Dec 2, 2010 at 1:13
2

provinces, provinceMap, provinceDictionary

All come to mind. I like provinceMap my self. If it's a member field I would add an "m_" prefix, as in "m_provinceMap".

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    Ok. but this doesn't reflect the keys.
    – Shuo
    Dec 2, 2010 at 0:59
  • I'm ok with that. It should be pretty implicit in this case. I would go for shorter names, unless there's a reason that the keys could be ambiguous. If you had multiple maps containing provinces, then differentiating the keys would be important. In your example, thoug, there's no ambiguity. Dec 2, 2010 at 1:03
  • 1
    Hmm... I'm OK with provinceMap, provinceDictionary. But provinces seems to be a name of a List<string>.
    – Shuo
    Dec 2, 2010 at 1:11

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