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Q: WPF/C# - Default VS (2017) naming for event handlers using underscores

scharetteI think, opinions asides, we can all agree that in C# the convention for method names is using Pascal casing. Here is two threads confirming this fact from MSDN: (Source) When an identifier consists of multiple words, do not use separators, such as underscores ("_") or hyphens ("-"), between...

The thing is, conventions are there to simplify life. Reading the code etc. Example code is generated and put into each WinForms/CodeBehind's auto-generated files. From my perspective, if You can clearly read the code, there is no problem. Which means, it should not be renamed.
@Tatranskymedved Thanks for your comment. I understand your point totally. But, it has to do with more than just readable code I think. I'm from the Python world and I really like the snake casing convention. Although it is super readable in my opinion, I truly think that using it in C# code is bad. One of the most important advantage about conventions, is code consistency and I thought that the underscore usage came against it,
ASh
ASh
@scharette, maybe it si legacy. e.g. in winforms Form has FormClosing event. Form1_FormClosing event handler is more readable than Form1FormClosing.
What kind of objective basis would there be for determining a correct answer to this question?
Think of such method names as generated by tool. Do you really care what names are generated? I hope not. And it's just a private event handler. Could be as well just a lambda (do you care about lambda name?).
09:14
@ASh Good point, probably is. But seems kinda of unclear what conventions should be followed. People seems to thinks this is unrelevant and opinion based and I understand their opinions. I just thought conventions should always be clear and followed.
@scharette If there's one clearly defined exception, which is obviously a convention itself, with a rationale obvious to anyone, and strongly encouraged by the IDE, that hardly means that there are no standards at all and we may as well just use GUIDs for all our identifiers. You're upset that part of the C# naming conventions aren't mentioned on the MSDN page you looked at. So what?
@EdPlunkett What if I don't use Visual studio as my IDE ? (I'm far from upset btw haha)
@scharette I'd use underscores anyway. They clearly delineate the two parts of a compound identifier, and in my opinioin that's the best way to do it.
@EdPlunkett My point is that without Visual Studio it would have been really unlikely that I would have add an underscore at all since I can't know an obvious convention that doesn't even exists in the first place.
@EdPlunkett thanks for your feedback though.
09:14
@Tatranskymedved Thanks for the link, really similar. Should we vote to close also ?
Generally, it is good question, in case of Python it would make sense. In regards to C#, there is plenty of similar question and this is more like duplicate to me. Unfortunatelly there are no resources described by MS how we should work with the _ in the name. Also, there is topic on naming conventions on Meta: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/287291/…
@Tatranskymedved I totally agree with you and this is why I asked. Also, I did my research and did not find any answer related to WPF and visual studio specifically.
@scharette I'll be happy to reword my remarks if you had trouble understanding what "obvious" referred to. Let me know. Moving along: If you aren't using VS, it's unlikely that VS will generate any event handler names for you, so this issue won't affect you. As you say: "my question is specific to event handlers automatically created by Visual Studio". You also say "naming conventions are ... a core element of a language" -- hardly. The compiler doesn't even issue a warning. Try using prototype inheritance in C#, or s-expressions. Try var x = "2" * "3";
@EdPlunkett Thanks again for your clarification. But I Think that you also misunderstood my point. You say that If you aren't using VS, it's unlikely that VS will generate any event handler names for you, so this issue won't affect you, actually it is a really good example where it affects me. I'm not saying that it is a run time error or a problem compiler wise, but conventions, in theory, assure code consistency between language users. In the case I pointed out this is clearly a flaw since two developers could use opposite naming convention (related to underscore usage in this case).

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