patad
patad

Reputation: 9672

When should I name things with initial capital letters?

I have always wondered when to use identifiers (for example, functions) with capital first letter instead of camel case. I always write my JS in camel case like this:

function doStuff() {}

var simpleVar = 'some stuff',
    myAry = [],
    myObj = {};

... But I know I am supposed to name some things with capital first letters. I just don't know WHEN this rule applies. Hope somebody can make things a bit clearer to me.

Upvotes: 25

Views: 22925

Answers (3)

Madara's Ghost
Madara's Ghost

Reputation: 174957

The name convention states that class names are named with a first capital letter, I'm not sure how it's like with javascript, which is a prototype based language, but basically it's

class ClassName
var varName
function funcName()

Upvotes: 6

louis.luo
louis.luo

Reputation: 2971

According to the book "Javascript: the good parts", you should only capitalise the first character of the name of a function when you need to construct the object by "new" keyword.

This is called "the Constructor Invocation Pattern", a way to inherits.

Upvotes: 37

Peter-Paul van Gemerden
Peter-Paul van Gemerden

Reputation: 7011

The convention is to name constructor functions (i.e. functions that will be used with the new keyword) with starting capital.

function MyType(simpleVar) {
    this.simpleVar = simpleVar;
}

myObject = new MyType(42);

Upvotes: 19

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