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Does anyone know where this convention came from?
Message
From
21/09/2003 20:10:08
 
 
To
21/09/2003 10:54:16
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00830750
Message ID:
00830956
Views:
21
Yes, but I'm really not sure I see your point. Are you saying that the fact that Codebook existed before VFP3 means that the statement in the VFP3 codebook book is false? What logic dictates that?

If the codebook standards are NOT based on Microsoft's Hungarian notation, why say they are? If they are based on a previous version of codebook's standards, why not say that instead?

Alan

>Codebook existed before VFP3.
>
>>Interesting. In the Visual Foxpro 3 Codebook, it says that the codebook's standards are based on Microsoft's Hungarian Notation. I suppose they were only referring to the concept and not necessarily the character representations themselves.
>>
>>Alan
>>
>>>>Hi All,
>>>>
>>>>Like many of you, I use the t prefix to reference parameters or arguments. Does anyone know why t and not a (argument) or p (parameter)?
>>>
>>>The t was first codified for xBase in Flash Creative Management's "Coding Standards and Guidelines", later incorporated into the first Codebook.
>>>
>>>yag chose t for parameTer and g for Global to avoid confusion between Public and Private.
>>>
>>>Dan
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