Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!wasatch!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!mcvax!ndosl!fdmetd!steinar
From: steinar@fdmetd.uucp (Steinar Overbeck Cook)
Newsgroups: comp.software-eng
Subject: Re: Experiences with Hungarian Naming Conventions
Message-ID: <489@fdmetd.uucp>
Date: 18 Aug 89 05:47:18 GMT
References: <965@swdev.Waterloo.NCR.COM> <974@swdev.Waterloo.NCR.COM>
Reply-To: steinar@fdmetd.UUCP (PUT YOUR NAME HERE)
Organization: Fellesdata a.s, Oslo, NORWAY
Lines: 24

In article <974@swdev.Waterloo.NCR.COM> neil@swdev.Waterloo.NCR.COM (Neil A. Law) writes:
>
>
>If anyone has any articles on the subject I would appreciate if you could send
>me a copy (mail or email).  I would especially be interested in obtaining a
>copy of Charles Simonyi's Meta-Programming thesis.
>
There is an article on this subject in PC MAGAZINE, march 14th. 1989,
page 329, written by Charles Petzold. It is titled 'Speaking the
language of the PM API'.

By the way, you should talk to your colleagues at E&M (or is it S&E) in
Columbia, SC. They use Hungarian notation when they program the WS-300,
or more commonly known as the nGen from Convergent Technologies.

I didn't like the Hungarian notation in the start, but after a while I
realized it was much easier to maintain code written with the Hungarian
notation.

-- 
Steinar Overbeck Cook, Fellesdata a.s, P.O. Box 248, 0212 OSLO 2, NORWAY
Phone : +47 2 52 80 80                            Fax   : +47 2 52 85 10
E-mail : ...!mcvax!ndosl!fdmetd!steinar  or       steinar@fdmetd.uucp