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Home/ Questions/Q 6103783
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T13:46:05+00:00 2026-05-23T13:46:05+00:00

Have you ever wondered why MS doesn’t write abbreviations in all upper case? Like

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Have you ever wondered why MS doesn’t write abbreviations in all upper case? Like Guid, BmpBitmapEncoder, System.Net.Mime, HttpWebRequest, XmlDocument, etc., instead of GUID, BMPBitmapEncoder, System.Net.MIME, HTTPWebRequest, XMLDocument. I suspect it’s for better readability, but in my opinion, it’s worse, and maybe even a bit incorrect. Is there an MS document that explains why they decided to do it like this? I’m sure it’s intentional, but here’s a bonus question, find a name in the BCL which contains an all upper case abbreviation 🙂

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T13:46:05+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 1:46 pm

    The rule they use is that two-character acronyms are left uppercase: IOException

    While longer acronyms are treated as words and use initial cap.

    From http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms229043.aspx:

    The following guidelines specify the proper casing for short and long acronyms. The identifier casing rules take precedence over acronym casing rules.

    Do capitalize both characters of two-character acronyms, except the first word of a camel-cased identifier.

    A property named DBRate is an example of a short acronym (DB) used as the first word of a Pascal-cased identifier. A parameter named ioChannel is an example of a short acronym (IO) used as the first word of a camel-cased identifier.

    Do capitalize only the first character of acronyms with three or more characters, except the first word of a camel-cased identifier.

    A class named XmlWriter is an example of a long acronym used as the first word of a Pascal-cased identifier. A parameter named htmlReader is an example of a long acronym used as the first word of a camel-cased identifier.

    Do not capitalize any of the characters of any acronyms, whatever their length, at the beginning of a camel-cased identifier.

    A parameter named xmlStream is an example of a long acronym (xml) used as the first word of a camel-cased identifier. A parameter named dbServerName is an example of a short acronym (db) used as the first word of a camel-cased identifier.

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