>int x;
>int xx;
>int y;
>int yy;
>int z;
>int zz;
Name a better naming system for integers, I bet you cant
>int x;
>int xx;
>int y;
>int yy;
>int z;
>int zz;
Name a better naming system for integers, I bet you cant
>int testInt
>int number = 0;
OH GEE WHIZ BOIZ
int VARIABLE_ONE
int VARIABLE_TWO
double VARIABLE_THREE
String VARIABLE_FOUR
>int xx;
>int xX;
>int Xx;
>int XX;
What do I win...
int I
int l
int 1
int 2
int 3
int meme;
int botnet;
int gentoo;
wouldn't it hurt to sit on your own brain like that? wouldn't you get a lot of diseases this way?
how is the other guy connected? through a brain-butt umbilical cord? i have lots of questions
int PROJECTNAME_PACKAGENAME_CLASSNAME_SIGNED_INTEGER_1
That's probably because you're not an intellectual user
Your brain actually has no pain sensing nerves in it.
Never evolved them because until the last 100 years, if something made it through your skull, you were probably dead.
Taking the OP's image literally, sitting on your brain would probably kill some neurons, and also affect other areas by supressing blood flow. That said, if you have a brain that big, you have a lot of extra neurons to spare.
>would probably kill some neurons
yeah that's an understatement
Can you sit on your brain and report the effects to us?
You just don't understand...
what the fuck is this?
I second this
>int xXx1337_h4xx0rxXx;
I would fuck your ass in the office infront of everyone on the scrum team if i ever saw that kind of naming scheme
FORTH!!! LANGUAGE OF THE PURE, CLEAN, AND SOPHISTICATED!!! BEGONE, PLEBIANS!!!
> int x1;
> int x2;
> ...int x9
>int xx1;
int i, j, k;
>not writing everything in brainfuck
const numbers = {
'int': {
'1': 1,
'2': 2,
'3': 2,
'4': 4,
'5': 5
...etc
},
'float': {
'0.01': 0.01,
'0.02': 0.02,
'0.03': 0.03,
'0.04': 0.04,
'0.05': 0.05,
'0.06': 0.06,
...etc
}
}
ArrayList objects = new ArrayList();
just store everything there
Thanks, mate.
#define x 100
#define y 200
fixed
asking the real questions here
int var
>int int; is invalid
Int one = 0;
int x;
int xx;
int xxx;
int xxxx;
int xxxxx;
int xxxxxx;
int xxxxxxx;
int xxxxxxxx;
int xxxxxxxxx;
int xxxxxxxxxx;
int xxxxxxxxxxx;
float g;
int MyFirstInteger = 0;
Subtle.
That's why I love python. Instead of having to store ALL possible numbers you can just eval('1') and get a 1.
It depends on what you're doing user. For example when I'm fucking with 3d vector I usually use:
Ax,ay,az
Bx,by,bz
Cx,cy,cz
int O;
int 0;
>this.x=x
Your code is wrong.
int x;
int y;
int z;
int a;
int b;
int c;
int m;
int n;
int im_using_this_for_while_loop = 0;
int _
int __
int ___
int ____
int _____
>var x, y, z int
>xy
its not how actually google koders do?
Maybe the physical keyboard is broken...
[spoiler] Or he is just a moron [/spoiler]
>int integer
int x
int y
int z
int i
int j
int k
if you need anymore than that you should probablly refactor your code.
Cx
int num_bullets;
int hit_points;
int radius;
int tmp[5];
beat this
int eax;
int ebx;
int ecx;
int edx;
int esi;
int edi;
Why would I need ints?
Just use doubles or longs
>he still writes programs with global variables
>he doesn't know the benefits of using different types of variables for different types of data
int xmm0[4];
I just named two different types for two different purposes
int five = 5;
>int a[100];
(xa,ya,za)(xb,yb,zb)...(xn-1,yn-1,zn-1)(xn,yn,zn)
int