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Newer page: | version 2 | Last edited on Friday, July 26, 2002 9:41:20 pm | by CraigBox | Revert |
Older page: | version 1 | Last edited on Friday, July 26, 2002 9:41:03 pm | by CraigBox | Revert |
@@ -3,12 +3,8 @@
Take the WandGroup network engineers (WAND) at Waikato University and the WanDaemon software (WAND) developed by a couple of people who worked there.
Derived from programming:
-; Namespace : A namespace is much what it sounds like - a finite space that names can be defined and identified in. For example,
-
if you're writing a program and you wanted to define a class called Object, you'd be out of luck as the class Object
-
already exists. If you were able to define a second class called Object, how would the computer know the difference
+; Namespace : A namespace is much what it sounds like - a finite space that names can be defined and identified in. For example, if you're writing a program and you wanted to define a class called Object, you'd be out of luck as the class Object already exists. If you were able to define a second class called Object, how would the computer know the difference
between the two?
-; Namespace collision "
When two companies/groups/people try to name thier classes with the same name, or define methods off of a class
-
with the same name. To help avoid namespace collision not only within your own projects, but from other companies
-
like third party vendors, it's a common practice to prefix your classes with some acronym, for example, if you work for
-
MegaCorp you might prefix all your classes with 'Mc'
+
+
; Namespace collision :
When two companies/groups/people try to name thier classes with the same name, or define methods off of a class with the same name. To help avoid namespace collision not only within your own projects, but from other companies like third party vendors, it's a common practice to prefix your classes with some acronym, for example, if you work for MegaCorp you might prefix all your classes with 'Mc'