Sunday, January 04, 2009

[Cpp-Programming] Re: why underscore character "_" is used a lot in the CPP standard library

On Sun, Jan 4, 2009 at 10:53 PM, SeaN <guo.xiaoyong@gmail.com> wrote:

A lot of member functions and variables have "_" as the first
character of their names.
Why?

Historical reasons.  There are no private variables in C, so to separate functions and variables that should be used from outside a library from those that shouldn't, they used underscores for things internal to the library.
The practice never went away because it's convenient to know when writing/looking at code which variables are private and which aren't.  A good IDE with intelligent highlighting and intellisense-like capabilities will tell you this anyways, but a surprising number of programmers refuse to give up their outdated editors.

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[Cpp-Programming] why underscore character "_" is used a lot in the CPP standard library

A lot of member functions and variables have "_" as the first
character of their names.
Why?
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