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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T20:00:11+00:00 2026-05-18T20:00:11+00:00

Erlang obviously has a notion of namespace , we use things like application:start() every

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Erlang obviously has a notion of namespace, we use things like application:start() every day.

I would like to know if there is such a thing as namespace for records. In my application I have defined record user. Everything was fine until I needed to include rabbit.hrl from RabbitMQ which also defines user, which is conflicting with mine.

Online search didn’t yield much to resolve this. I have considered renaming my user record and prefixing it with something, say "myapp_user". This will fix this particular issue, until I suspect I hit another conflict say with my record "session".

What are my options here? Is adding a prefix myapp_ to all my records a good practice, or is there a real support for namespaces with records and I am just not finding it?

EDIT: Thank you everyone for your answers. What I’ve learned is that the records are global. The accepted answer made it very clear. I will go with adding prefixes to all my records, as I have expected.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T20:00:12+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 8:00 pm

    I would argue that Erlang has no namespaces whatsoever. Modules are global (with the exception of a very unpopular extension to the language), names are global (either to the node or the cluster), pids are global, ports are global, references are global, etc.

    Everything is laid flat. The namespacing in Erlang is thus done by convention rather than any other mean. This is why you have <appname>_app, <appname>_sup, etc. as module names. The registered processes also likely follow that pattern, and ETS tables, and so on.

    However, you should note that records themselves are not global things: as JUST MY correct OPINION has put it, records are simply a compiler trick over tuples. Because of this, they’re local to a module definition. Nobody outside of the module will see a record unless they also include the record definition (either by copying it or with a header file, the later being the best way to do it).

    Now I could argue that because you need to include .hrl files and record definitions on a per-module basis, there is no such thing as namespacing records; they’re rather scoped in the module, like a variable would be. There is no reason to ever namespace them: just include the right one.

    Of course, it could be the case that you include record definitions from two modules, and both records have the same name. If this happens, renaming the records with a prefix might be necessary, but this is a rather rare occurrence in my experience.

    Note that it’s also generally a bad idea to expose records to other modules. One of the problems of doing so is that all modules depending on yours now get to include its .hrl file. If your module then change the record definition, you will have to recompile every other module that depends on it. A better practice should be to implement functions to interact with the data. Note that get(Key, Struct) isn’t always a good idea. If you can pick meaningful names (age, name, children, etc.), your code and API should make more sense to readers.

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