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    3 months ago

    Your naming advice is universally good.

    However, if this was a functional programming language, there wouldn’t be any mutable global variables to be unaware were being examined, nor could Suck do any sucking unless it were passed the thing to suck and returned the sucked thing.

    In this way the subtle class of bugs that you both are warning against would be impossible to introduce.

    Depending on the kind of sucking that Suck does, however, you may perceive the global invisibility and availability of the sucking as an advantage in this case. But possibly not if the code is your girlfriend/boyfriend.

    • Programmer Belch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      I didn’t need to do this but I did and now I want it in my comment history:

      class Suckable {
          bool unsucked;
      
      public:
          Suckable () {
              unsucked = true;
          }
      
          void Suck() {
              unsucked = false;
          }
      
          void CheckAndSuck() {
              if (unsucked) {
                  Suck();
              }
          }
      };
      

      Sorry for making you see c++, it’s the language I’m currently using. This program compiles on my machine and doesn’t use global variables.

      • Log in | Sign up@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Indeed, indeed.

        No need to apologise for posting c++ in the channel. The programming world owes a lot to Prof. Stroustrup. I enjoyed your reply a great deal.

        You have two choices: firstly, a regular regular attribute, where you can Suckable myThing; and myThing.CheckAndSuck; etc to your heart’s content, and indeed no global variables are being sucked.

        But you can also declare static bool unsucked; and what is a class variable if not a global variable by another name?

        In fact, what is to stop your innocent-sounding accessor method from nuking the filesystem or calling memLeak.recurse();?

        I’m not sure that these things keep you up at night, but you have my sympathy if they do.

        If there was anything I could do to help you relax after a stressful day of multiple inheritance and manual memory management, I would.

        Well, except that of course. I mean, we all draw the line somewhere.

        Unless we’ve had too much to drink or smoked too much weed, in which case boundaries seem less important at the time.

        One time in college, my friend…

        but no, that’s another story for another thread.