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I am an old FORTRAN programmer! It was the second language they taught us at Uni - the first (Gawd help us) was COBOL which was enough to put quite a few people right off the whole idea...
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Not just FORTRAN. We used i, j, and k for loop vars in all my C and C++ classes, too.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
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As I said earlier: The Lounge[^]
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Pardon the repetition. I don't always read every other comment before adding my own. TL;DR syndrome.
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
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No problem: I thought of copy'n'paste but couldn't be arsed!
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.
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I have never touched Fortran or Cobol and I use the same conventions, I have no idea where I picked it up from as I learnt to code on a commodore 64 and then from a SuperBase manual.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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Some early BASIC versions allowed up to 26 numeric variables; i through m (?) were integers, everything else floating point. It's a reflection of the generosity of 26 variables that in practice most of us only ever needed i, j, k as integers; we really were spoiled for choice.
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My first BASIC experience was with 286 variables: A-Z, A0-A9, B0-B9, ... And 26 string variables: A$ to Z$. I never saw a BASIC so tiny that it had only 26 numeric variables - maybe it existed, but I doubt that any real world problems were solved with that compiler .
Also, the first Basic compiler I worked with didn't distinguish between integer and float - that was quite common in the early Basic days. I believe that with the Univac 1100 mainframe series Basic, every variable was born as integer, but as soon as it was assigned a float literal value or the result of a non-integer expression, the type was changed on the fly. (So I think it really was an interpreter, not a compiler system.) No Fortran style implicit type by (first) letter.
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I used the same conventions, I started with Basic and Pascal, then Delphi and VB
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this style works for me. Its hip like texting acronyms now. You could use i d k instead or f y i.
My personal favorite was back when I used VB
Dim g as string... It made my programming style quite revealing.
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j snooze wrote: You could use i d k They would be good for WHILE loops, but not FOR -- because with FOR loops, you do k.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Are you telling that there is an other way to do loops?
(To be honest I never did FORTRAN, but the i,j,k variable names came down to me via C while learning)
"The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge". Stephen Hawking, 1942- 2018
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A while ago [^].
I never coded in FORTRAN. I suppose it comes (like FORTRAN) from mathematics.
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Developers who are content with Textbox1, Textbox2 irk the crap out of me, never mind merely irritate.
"'Do what thou wilt...' is to bid Stars to shine, Vines to bear grapes, Water to seek its level; man is the only being in Nature that has striven to set himself at odds with himself."
—Aleister Crowley
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I also used i,j,k for indices, why does it bother you?
Although someone ask me, once, to use more descriptive name, so I indulged him and refactor my indice to "variableIndiceForArrayIndexFrom0ToListCount" which, granted, is much more descriptive and easy to read!
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well another memory muscle reason for many...
before FORTRAN many learned BASIC (back in the day when a school would have 2 or 3 TRS-80 or similar computers, the first version (Model I with 4k RAM) only had single char variables A..Z. Later the Model II (with the massive 16k) allowed 2 letters AA..ZZ.
anyhoo it was actually in the Programming Guide (probably inspired from FORTRAN) that suggested
I, J, K, L... for "general" integers (in particular FOR loops), (also ref: I for iterator)
S, T, U for general strings.
"Important" variables used A, B, C (effectively the global variables)
suggested sticking to single letters for compatibility with Model I.
Some versions of FORTRAN also had that 2 letter limit.
"That way you could better determine what any variable was for/about."
mock it if you will, but given the naming limitations of the time at least some were already invested enough to come up with some common coding styles.
- Nowadays i, j as iterators/offsets even makes appearances in mathematics,
- when you see "for (i = 0; ..." you already know the intent (unless you or the programmer are idiot(s), and that's even if it's someone else's code.
-- and inasmuch almost makes it better to keep using i, j
... unless you're some sort of purist 'style wanker' who says 'the code may be misunderstood'
..... (and let's face it: such comments are nearly always a reflection of the lack of abilities of the idiot quoting them).
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For general strings I kind of like S T F U. No offence intended, merely humor.
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But of course. The shorter the scope, the shorter the name. The longer the scope, the longer the name.
Waaayyy back in a Pascal class I took in the mid-80s (on a PDP-11), for one assignment I chose to use the number of syllables of nonsense words to indicate the usage of the variables. Try typing "tafimadiddle" many times on a VT-100 (no cut/paste).
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Never thought of it as a bad thing.
I mostly use i,j,k,... as indexers for many reasons.
Granted I never use them for anything else, except in full words
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Though being rather young I do have the same habit. Guess I've picked that one up when taking my first C class 9 years ago (that is longer than it actually feels), and I just stuck with it, though I'm not using it as often in C#, where most of the stuff is Linq (x => x) it is there - Or I just use foreach.
I only have a signature in order to let @DalekDave follow my posts.
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Good for you! we all know that the compiler is MUCH slower to parse loopIndex than a simple i
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Mathematicians used i, j and k as indexes long before Babbage's Analythical Machine. It did not come with Fortran.
When I was a student, the professors insisted on long, descriptive names in our programming hand-ins. I looked over the shoulder of one of my classmates: His integer variables where named I01, I02,... float variables F01, F02... I shook my head: Prof xxx will explode into small pices when he sees that code! My classmate smiled back: Oh no, of course I make a global subsistute of I01 with NumberOfFruitBaskets, I02 with NumberOfApplesPerBasket, F01 with AverageWeightPerApple and so on, but I can't be bothered with typing those long names when I develop the program! (He was the brightest kid in class, and certainly had the mental capacity to keep the asossication between F01 and the average apple weight.)
In my current job, one group revising our coding standards suggested that code lines were restricted to at most 72 characters (they were serious about that!). My project asked for an exception, as we had rules for the naming of cross-module #define constants that in some cases lead to identifiers exceeding the 72 char limit. ... I think that is going a little bit too far in the other direction.
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I recall that in calculus we would use i, j and k as the iterator variables for summation operators. The exception seemed to be t when it was time but that was more physics applications than the pure math.
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