Skip to Content
Visual Basic® 2010 Programmer's Reference
book

Visual Basic® 2010 Programmer's Reference

by Rod Stephens
March 2010
Intermediate to advanced
1271 pages
31h 57m
English
Wrox
Content preview from Visual Basic® 2010 Programmer's Reference

Chapter 27. Namespaces

In large applications, it is fairly common to have name collisions. One developer might create an Employee class, while another makes a function named Employee that returns the employee ID for a particular person's name. Or two developers might build different Employee classes that have different properties and different purposes. When multiple items have the same name, this is called a namespace collision or namespace pollution.

These sorts of name conflicts are most common when programmers are not working closely together. For example, different developers working on the payroll and human resources systems might both define Employee classes with slightly different purposes.

Namespaces enable you to classify and distinguish among programming entities that have the same name. For example, you might build the payroll system in the Payroll namespace and the human resources system in the HumanResources namespace. Then, the two Employee classes would have the fully qualified names Payroll.Employee and HumanResources.Employee, so they could coexist peacefully and the program could tell them apart.

The following code shows how an application would declare these two types of Employee objects:

Dim payroll_emp As Payroll.Employee
Dim hr_emp As HumanResources.Employee

Namespaces can contain other namespaces, so you can build a hierarchical structure that groups different entities. You can divide the Payroll namespace into pieces to give developers working on that project ...

Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.

Read now

Unlock full access

More than 5,000 organizations count on O’Reilly

AirBnbBlueOriginElectronic ArtsHomeDepotNasdaqRakutenTata Consultancy Services

QuotationMarkO’Reilly covers everything we've got, with content to help us build a world-class technology community, upgrade the capabilities and competencies of our teams, and improve overall team performance as well as their engagement.
Julian F.
Head of Cybersecurity
QuotationMarkI wanted to learn C and C++, but it didn't click for me until I picked up an O'Reilly book. When I went on the O’Reilly platform, I was astonished to find all the books there, plus live events and sandboxes so you could play around with the technology.
Addison B.
Field Engineer
QuotationMarkI’ve been on the O’Reilly platform for more than eight years. I use a couple of learning platforms, but I'm on O'Reilly more than anybody else. When you're there, you start learning. I'm never disappointed.
Amir M.
Data Platform Tech Lead
QuotationMarkI'm always learning. So when I got on to O'Reilly, I was like a kid in a candy store. There are playlists. There are answers. There's on-demand training. It's worth its weight in gold, in terms of what it allows me to do.
Mark W.
Embedded Software Engineer

You might also like

Visual Basic 2012 Programmer's Reference

Visual Basic 2012 Programmer's Reference

Rod Stephens

Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9780470499832Purchase book