Timeline for Banish [locals]
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
10 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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May 1, 2017 at 19:51 | history | edited | Marco van de Voort | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
grammar fix
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May 31, 2015 at 22:25 | comment | added | dfeuer | @BenVoigt, I disagree for the simple reason that I think local-variables is insufficiently specific to be a good tag. I'd probably tag with reflection and the language tag, I think. | |
May 31, 2015 at 14:43 | comment | added | Ben Voigt | And rather than "visual-studio-locals-window", use local-variables together with debugger. The same feature is available in Eclipse, Code Composer Studio, and pretty much every IDE in existence. | |
May 31, 2015 at 14:41 | comment | added | Ben Voigt | @Braiam: Says who? If that were true, some tag wikis would have to be hundreds of pages long. Saying that the variables are associated to a particular function, and mentioning scope, lifetime, and recursion should be adequate. What you don't have to do is create overspecified tags for general concepts. For example, the "python-locals" tag suggested in the question should be a combination of local-variables and reflection. Many languages besides python allow enumeration of the local symbol table (example: Matlab). | |
May 31, 2015 at 13:17 | comment | added | Braiam | @BenVoigt if you are tasked with writing a tag excerpt for this tag, what would be the body of it? Remember you have to capture the complete usage, not just a part of it. | |
May 31, 2015 at 5:00 | comment | added | Ben Voigt | @Braiam: No, I'm not missing the point. There are multiple things you can do with local variables (language rules concerning local variables, or inspect them at runtime using a debugger or reflection API), but they are all still about the same topic: local variables. Disambiguation is needed when the term means different things at different times, not when there are multiple questions about the same thing. All of these are fundamentally about the same thing. | |
May 31, 2015 at 4:56 | comment | added | Braiam | @BenVoigt you are missing the point. "locals" doesn't mean "local variables" on all programming contexts. It can mean the use of a function to get local variables (aka X to obtain Y), something that wants to be called "locals" but it's actually partials in Ruby (aka Z to set Y), and a window to see those "locals variables" in VS (aka P to see Y), where X, Z and P are three different things with similar naming yet different purposes and functionality which only point in common is that they have something to do with "local variables". Y obviously is the "locals variables". | |
May 31, 2015 at 4:12 | comment | added | Ben Voigt | @Braiam: The question has, besides typos, only identified one case that isn't about local variables (javascript local storage) | |
May 30, 2015 at 19:04 | comment | added | Braiam | Not sure if this is a good idea since not all "locals" usage are about local variables, as the Python example demonstrate and dominates in the share. | |
May 30, 2015 at 16:50 | history | answered | Marco van de Voort | CC BY-SA 3.0 |