Just a matter of curiosity. I posted a question two days ago someone made edits. Here's a subsample, where a sentence was changed from this:
Typically, if I have a bool field in my model, it is because the underlying database has a bit value. My users, however, would prefer to have yes/no instead of true/false or checkbox in views. Typically, I convert bool to string in my view model.
to this:
Typically, if I have a
bool
field in my model, it is because the underlying database has a bit value. My users, however, would prefer to have yes/no instead of true/false or checkbox in views. Typically, I convertbool
to string in myViewModel
.
I'm curious. Why edit my text to mark bool
and ViewModel
using code notation and not bit
, string
, all other instances of data types in my question? If there was a purpose and underlying method to it, I'd make sure to follow it. The only pattern I could see was that the C# data types were put in code format
.
It is to help SO database searches? Just curious if there's a reason.
bool
vs 'a boolean'). Glad the question is raised. And I'm starting to regret my last edit on a question... which was basically just inline code formatting ... :( (along with retagging for burnination)ViewModel
it was "viewmodel" toViewModel
. Having said that, it doesn't really make sense that any of it was done. I'd only tend to do this to highlight something in the text to lookout for in the main code block, if that make sense? Also I don't see what value adding the entity-framework tag addsbool
andstring
are questionable edits), since we're not talking about type identifiers in some specific programming language. I see no need to change the spelling of and quote "view model", and likewise "bit value" (since the data type isn't actually namedbit
per se). I think you'll find a lot of such edits are just people looking for any change to justify an edit for rep.