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Capitalization Conventions

Note

This content is reprinted by permission of Pearson Education, Inc. from Framework Design Guidelines: Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries, 2nd Edition. That edition was published in 2008, and the book has since been fully revised in the third edition. Some of the information on this page may be out-of-date.

The guidelines in this chapter lay out a simple method for using case that, when applied consistently, make identifiers for types, members, and parameters easy to read.

Capitalization Rules for Identifiers

To differentiate words in an identifier, capitalize the first letter of each word in the identifier. Do not use underscores to differentiate words, or for that matter, anywhere in identifiers. There are two appropriate ways to capitalize identifiers, depending on the use of the identifier:

  • PascalCasing

  • camelCasing

The PascalCasing convention, used for all identifiers except parameter names, capitalizes the first character of each word (including acronyms over two letters in length), as shown in the following examples:

PropertyDescriptor HtmlTag

A special case is made for two-letter acronyms in which both letters are capitalized, as shown in the following identifier:

IOStream

The camelCasing convention, used only for parameter names, capitalizes the first character of each word except the first word, as shown in the following examples. As the example also shows, two-letter acronyms that begin a camel-cased identifier are both lowercase.

propertyDescriptor ioStream htmlTag

✔️ DO use PascalCasing for all public member, type, and namespace names consisting of multiple words.

✔️ DO use camelCasing for parameter names.

The following table describes the capitalization rules for different types of identifiers.

Identifier Casing Example
Namespace Pascal namespace System.Security { ... }
Type Pascal public class StreamReader { ... }
Interface Pascal public interface IEnumerable { ... }
Method Pascal public class Object {
public virtual string ToString();
}
Property Pascal public class String {
public int Length { get; }
}
Event Pascal public class Process {
public event EventHandler Exited;
}
Field Pascal public class MessageQueue {
public static readonly TimeSpan
InfiniteTimeout;
}
public struct UInt32 {
public const Min = 0;
}
Enum value Pascal public enum FileMode {
Append,
...
}
Parameter Camel public class Convert {
public static int ToInt32(string value);
}

Capitalizing Compound Words and Common Terms

Most compound terms are treated as single words for purposes of capitalization.

❌ DO NOT capitalize each word in so-called closed-form compound words.

These are compound words written as a single word, such as endpoint. For the purpose of casing guidelines, treat a closed-form compound word as a single word. Use a current dictionary to determine if a compound word is written in closed form.

Pascal Camel Not
BitFlag bitFlag Bitflag
Callback callback CallBack
Canceled canceled Cancelled
DoNot doNot Don't
Email email EMail
Endpoint endpoint EndPoint
FileName fileName Filename
Gridline gridline GridLine
Hashtable hashtable HashTable
Id id ID
Indexes indexes Indices
LogOff logOff LogOut
LogOn logOn LogIn
Metadata metadata MetaData, metaData
Multipanel multipanel MultiPanel
Multiview multiview MultiView
Namespace namespace NameSpace
Ok ok OK
Pi pi PI
Placeholder placeholder PlaceHolder
SignIn signIn SignOn
SignOut signOut SignOff
UserName userName Username
WhiteSpace whiteSpace Whitespace
Writable writable Writeable

Case Sensitivity

Languages that can run on the CLR are not required to support case-sensitivity, although some do. Even if your language supports it, other languages that might access your framework do not. Any APIs that are externally accessible, therefore, cannot rely on case alone to distinguish between two names in the same context.

❌ DO NOT assume that all programming languages are case sensitive. They are not. Names cannot differ by case alone.

Portions © 2005, 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education, Inc. from Framework Design Guidelines: Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries, 2nd Edition by Krzysztof Cwalina and Brad Abrams, published Oct 22, 2008 by Addison-Wesley Professional as part of the Microsoft Windows Development Series.

See also