Broken Hungarian Notation

This is something rather insane that I use.

I have rather adapted an unusual naming convention based on HungarianNotation. More specific entries are further down, pick last matching rule.

 * Private (and sometimes protected) member variables start with _.
 * Stack references get prefix o: oRow, oFactory, oConnection, etc.
 * Handles to objects (or objects that wrap such handles) get single letter prefixes:
   * f for file objects
   * s for sockets
   * h for other random objects (including nonspecific IO handles)
 * Handles to GUI objects get a three letter type identifier: txt, cmb, cmd, tv, frm, etc.
 * pointers (except object pointers) usually start with p.
   * Looping pointers are ptr or derived from ptr.
 * Trivially named objects get single or two letter starting with certain letters:
   * i, j, k: unspecified integer, often loop counter or index
   * h: handle that is operated on
   * n, m: size, count (number of things to operate on)
   * s, t: strings (if two strings, s is the target, t is the source)
   * r: return value of function when it needs to be a local variable

The only really strange thing here is that opened files get called fWhatever, but are passed to IO routines receiving h as the argument. The o as member reference is derived from the use of o as Object. _o strikes me as too ugly to be useful.


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