Intercapping



Intercapping

CamelCase (also spelled "camel case" and sometimes known as camel caps or medial capitals) is the practice of writing compound words or phrases in which the words are joined without spaces and are capitalized within the compound — as in LaBelle, BackColor, or iMac. The name comes from the uppercase "bumps" in the middle of the compound word, suggestive of the humps of a camel.

CamelCase is a standard identifier naming convention for several programming languages, and has become fashionable in marketing for names of products and companies. However, CamelCase is rarely used in formal written English, and most style guides recommend against its use.



Even more about Intercapping

Intercapping

In the early nineties, no interview with a typeface designer was complete without the obligatory question about "intercapping," the practice of using a capital letter in the middle ...

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CamelCase (also spelled "camel case" and sometimes known as camel caps [citation needed] or medial capitals) is the practice of writing compound words or phrases in which the words ...

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