Lets have an example. You are looking at a function for checking if somebody was of legal age when s/he bought that drink. It's not working, or you would not be here.
In English:
static bool WasOfLegalAgeAtTheTimeOfPurchase(Person p, Date purchaseDate, Drink d)
{
return (p.BirthDate + purchaseDate) > d.RequiredLegalAge;
}
Easy. You mixed that up. It should have read purchaseDate - BirthDate
. No brainer, you've got 5 answers in three minutes fighting for rep.
Now let's try this again when I speak Huffnockese and use it in my naming:
static bool FraNuklEkorAffDeeta(Ramulk r, Date jobingaTor, Granu g)
{
return (r.Protpork + jobingaTor) > g.KnabMoDeeta;
}
Okay. Breathe. Think. There must be sense in it. Lets try to decipher it. At this point, you lost me. I'm here to help people with programming problems, not to solve riddles in my spare time. I could buy a magazine full of riddles if I wanted and I decided not to.
The base line is: use whatever naming you like best. However, if you need help, it's best to make it as easy as possible to answer you. And Huffnockese makes it harder. Any other language will do so as well. I will certainly not downvote you, but you will lose my answer. And in the end, you are asking questions to get answers, not votes.
Sidenote, I'm not a native speaker. English is a foreign language for me as well. But it makes communicating so much easier, that it's worth it :)
nombre
is understandable to me and the only Spanish I know is what I picked up 40 years ago on family holidays to Spain and from watching Westerns that had Mexican characters.public string name = {get; set}
in Italian ought to bepubblico stringa nome = {ottieni; imposta}
whilepublic string nome = {get; set}
is not "Italian code", it only increases confusion because now to understand the underlying intention of the code you have to speak two languages instead of one.