|  | Posted by Jerry Stuckle on 11/02/07 02:33 
Rik Wasmus wrote:> On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 02:51:59 +0100, Jerry Stuckle
 > <jstucklex@attglobal.net> wrote:
 >
 >> Norman Peelman wrote:
 >>> Philluminati wrote:
 >>>> I've been looking on the Internet and I can't seem to see any one
 >>>> specifying a variable with a type. Will someone please tell me it can
 >>>> be done.
 >>>>
 >>>> int $tablename = 0;
 >>>>
 >>>> rather than
 >>>>
 >>>> var $tablename = 0;
 >>>>
 >>>> Is it possible?
 >>>>
 >>>> If not, do you all go back to using hungarian notation in order to
 >>>> know what data types your working so you don't accidently set false
 >>>> and true against a flag which is supposed to 0 and -1?
 >>>>
 >>>    You could name your variables to match the data you expect them to
 >>> hold, for instance:
 >>>  $bTemp --> boolean
 >>> $sTemp --> string
 >>> $iTemp --> integer
 >>> $fTemp --> float
 >>>  ...it may help you visually.
 >>>  Norm
 >>>
 >>
 >> Which is Hungarian notation - and something most of us don't use in PHP.
 >>
 >
 > Hmm, maybe a deviation here, I see this more often then not..
 
 Hi, Rik,
 
 I see it very seldom on untyped languages such as PHP.  It is, however,
 quite common in languages like C and PASCAL - although it seems to
 becoming less common there, also (IMHE, of course).
 
 --
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 Jerry Stuckle
 JDS Computer Training Corp.
 jstucklex@attglobal.net
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