Whatever convention you use - the first rule is: be consistent. Or is it "aways decide for readability"? Both are first.

Apart from that, there are many conventions and styles, and each comes with its reasoning.

CamelCase vs. underline_variables, hungarian notation (I mean the original one) etc... pick what best suits you.

For programming perl, in what concerns variables, apart from perlstyle I personally agree with points 20-22 of Abigail's coding guidelines, which - as per your example - I would extend as

Which means that e.g. if there are variables that are used only in a particular fragment of their scope, declare them at the beginning of that fragment. If they are important for what the block (scope, file) is all about, declare them up front.

If there's a great distance (measured in screen pages) between the declaration of variables and their use, add a short comment indicating the first occurence of their use.

--shmem

update: added readability to first rule

_($_=" "x(1<<5)."?\n".q·/)Oo.  G°\        /
                              /\_¯/(q    /
----------------------------  \__(m.====·.(_("always off the crowd"))."·
");sub _{s./.($e="'Itrs `mnsgdq Gdbj O`qkdq")=~y/"-y/#-z/;$e.e && print}

In reply to Re: Naming convention for variables, subroutines, modules, etc.. and variable declaration by shmem
in thread Naming convention for variables, subroutines, modules, etc.. and variable declaration by Anonymous Monk

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