Naming Conventions for .NET / C# Projects
Martin Zahn, Akadia AG, 20.03.2003
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The original of this document was developed by the Microsoft special interest group. We made some addons.
This document explains the naming conventions that should be used with .NET projects.
A consistent naming pattern is one of the most important elements of predictability and discoverability in a managed class library. Widespread use and understanding of these naming
guidelines should eliminate unclear code and make it easier for developers to understand shared code.
Capitalization Styles Defined
We define three types of capitalization styles:
Pascal case
The first letter in the identifier and the first letter of each subsequent concatenated word are capitalized.
Example:
BackColor, DataSet
Camel case
The first letter of an identifier is lowercase and the first letter of each subsequent concatenated word is capitalized.
Example:
numberOfDays, isValid
Uppercase
All letters in the identifier are capitalized.
Example:
ID, PI
Hungarian Type Notation Defined
Hungarian notation is any of a variety of standards for organizing a computer program by selecting a schema for naming your variables so that their type is readily available to someone
familiar with the notation. It is in fact a commenting technique.
Example:
strFirstName, iNumberOfDays
There are different opinions about using this kind of type notation in programming nowadays. Some say that it’s useful, and it should be used everywhere to enhance clarity of your code.
Others say it just obfuscates your code, because it has no real advantage in modern programming environments.
Our point of view is a moderated one: use it wisely, meaning, we only use Hungarian notation for private or local variables, that are only accessible and interesting to the programmer of the
class.
Don’t use it with public variables, properties or parameters in methods, because they are exposed to the outside world. Someone who uses your classes and accesses properties of your
class, is not interested in type, but just wants to use them.
In the .NET framework, there are a lot of types, so we extended and adapted the Hungarian notation with our own type notation.
Naming Guidelines
1). Private Variables (Fields in C#) Naming Guidelines(모든 멤버변수들은 앞에 "_" 를 사용해야한다. 그래야 다른 지역변수들과 구분할 수 있다)
Naming guidelines
Prefix private variables with a "_" and Hungarian-style notation.
Case guidelines
Use camel case as a general rule, or uppercase for very small words
Example:
_strFirstName, _dsetEmployees
// Field
private OleDbConnection _connection;
// Property
public OleDbConnection Connection
{
get { return _connection; }
set { _connection = value; }
}
2). Local Variables Naming Guidelines(지역변수에는 "_" 를 사용하지 않는다)
Naming guidelines
Prefix private or local variables with Hungarian-style notation.
Case guidelines
Use camel case as a general rule, or uppercase for very small words
Example:
strFirstName, dsetEmployees
3). Namespace Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
The general rule for naming namespaces is to use the company name followed by the technology name and optionally the feature and design as follows:
CompanyName.TechnologyName[.Feature][.Design]
Prefixing namespace names with a company name or other well-established brand avoids the possibility of two published namespaces having the same name. Use a stable, recognized
technology name at the second level of a hierarchical name.
Example:
Akadia.Traffic, System.Web.UI, System.Windows.Forms
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case as a general rule, or uppercase for very small words.
Example:
System.Windows.Forms, System.Web.UI
4). Class Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Use a noun or noun phrase to name a class.
Do not use a type prefix, such as C for class, on a class name.
Do not use the underscore character (_).
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case. Example:
FileStream, Button
5). Interface Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Prefix interface names with the letter "I", to indicate that the type is an interface.
Do not use the underscore character (_).
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case. Example:
IServiceProvider, IFormatable
6). Parameter Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Use descriptive parameter names. Parameter names should be descriptive enough that the name of the parameter and its type can be used to determine its meaning in most scenarios.
To distinguish parameters from other variables the prefix "p" should be used.
Do not prefix parameter names with Hungarian type notation.
Do not use a prefix for parameter names of an event handler and exceptions.
Case guidelines
Use camel case. Example:
pTypeName, pNumberOfItems
7). Method Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Use verbs or verb phrases to name methods.
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case. Example:
RemoveAll(), GetCharAt()
8). Property / Enumerations Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Use a noun or noun phrase to name properties.
Do not use Hungarian notation.
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case. Example:
BackColor, NumberOfItems
9). Event Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Use an EventHandler suffix on event handler names.
Specify two parameters named sender and e. The sender parameter represents the object that raised the event. The sender parameter is always of type object, even if it is possible to use
a more specific type. The state associated with the event is encapsulated in an instance of an event class named "e". Use an appropriate and specific event class for the e parameter type.
Name an event argument class with the EventArgs suffix.
Case guidelines
Use Pascal case. Example:
public delegate void MouseEventHandler(object sender, MouseEventArgs e);
9). Exception Naming Guidelines
Naming guidelines
Event handlers in Visual Studio .NET tend to use an "e" parameter for the event parameter to the call. To ensure we avoid a conflict, we will use "ex" as a standard variable name for
an Exception object.
Example
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Handle Exception
}
10). Constant Naming Guidelines
The names of variables declared class constants should be all uppercase with words separated by underscores. It is recommended to use a grouping naming schema.
Example (for group AP_WIN):
AP_WIN_MIN_WIDTH, AP_WIN_MAX_WIDTH, AP_WIN_MIN_HIGHT, AP_WIN_MAX_HIGHT
11). C# Primitive Type Notation
sbyte sy
short s
int i
long l
byte y
ushort us
uint ui
ulong ul
float f
double d
decimal dec
bool b
char c
12). Visual Control Type Notation
Assembly asm
Boolean bln
Button btn
Char ch
CheckBox cbx
ComboBox cmb
Container ctr
DataColumn dcol
DataGrid dgrid
DataGridDateTimePickerColumn dgdtpc
DataGridTableStyle dgts
DataGridTextBoxColumn dgtbc
DataReader dreader
DataRow drow
DataSet dset
DataTable dtable
DateTime date
Dialog dialog
DialogResult dr
Double dbl
Exception ex
GroupBox gbx
HashTable htbl
ImageList iml
Integer int
Label lbl
ListBox lbx
ListView lv
MarshallByRefObject rmt
Mainmenu mm
MenuItem mi
MDI-Frame frame
MDI-Sheet sheet
NumericUpDown nud
Panel pnl
PictureBox pbx
RadioButton rbtn
SDI-Form form
SqlCommand sqlcom
SqlCommandBuilder sqlcomb
SqlConnection sqlcon
SqlDataAdapter sqlda
StatusBar stb
String str
StringBuilder strb
TabControl tabctrl
TabPage tabpage
TextBox tbx
ToolBar tbr
ToolBarButton tbb
Timer tmr
UserControl usr
WindowsPrincipal wpl
12). boolean이 들어가는 변수, 속성, 함수(method)등은 "is"또는 유사한 접두사를 사용한다.
Use camel case. Example:
private bool isFinished
13). 파일명과 클래스명은 같아야 한다.
Use Pascal case. Example:
Class name is "HelloWorld", File Name is "HelloWorld.cs"