lowercasewithcapitalinternal
lowercasewithcapitalinternal is a naming convention used in programming and sometimes in informal contexts to represent identifiers. In this convention, the entire identifier is typically in lowercase, with the exception of the first letter of subsequent words, which are capitalized. This is in contrast to camelCase, where the first letter of the identifier is also capitalized, or snake_case, where words are separated by underscores and all letters are lowercase.
The primary purpose of this convention is to improve readability for compound words or phrases within an
While not as universally adopted as camelCase or snake_case in many popular programming languages, lowercasewithcapitalinternal can