andros_rex@lemmy.world to Trans Memes@lemmy.blahaj.zone · 2 months agoprivate String gender;lemmy.world315427
535private String gender;lemmy.worldandros_rex@lemmy.world to Trans Memes@lemmy.blahaj.zone · 2 months ago31
Show ContentFarid@startrek.website134·2 months agoShould be enum. And don’t capitalize your variables.
Show Contentvalkyrieangela@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish6·2 months agoenum implies that you cant change it, unless you were referring to the bool then true.
Show ContentFarid@startrek.website10·2 months agoYes, instead of boolean. But instead of String, too, for optimization reasons. You could always just add more enum constants to it.
Show ContentCaveman@lemmy.world3·2 months agoThe MS style guide, which most C# code follows, says so. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/fundamentals/coding-style/identifier-names#pascal-case I personally hate it and I prefer the java/js style. The braces are also horrible. Here’s an example. public class ExampleEvents { public bool IsValid; public IWorkerQueue WorkerQueue { get; init; } public event Action EventProcessing; public void StartEventProcessing() { static int CountQueueItems() => WorkerQueue.Count; // ... } }
Should be enum.
And don’t capitalize your variables.
enum implies that you cant change it, unless you were referring to the bool then true.
Yes, instead of boolean. But instead of String, too, for optimization reasons. You could always just add more enum constants to it.
That requires a recompile though
Think of the patch notes though.
C# disagrees
Idk C#, could you explain?
The MS style guide, which most C# code follows, says so.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/fundamentals/coding-style/identifier-names#pascal-case
I personally hate it and I prefer the java/js style. The braces are also horrible. Here’s an example.
public class ExampleEvents { public bool IsValid; public IWorkerQueue WorkerQueue { get; init; } public event Action EventProcessing; public void StartEventProcessing() { static int CountQueueItems() => WorkerQueue.Count; // ... } }