I understand the reasoning behind one m as a non-static, private variable. But what about when there are two m's as seen here?
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Sub-class private non-static? – Michael Garner Dec 08 '15 at 23:55
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Makes sense to me. If you make an answer id mark it as answer – Daniel Kobe Dec 09 '15 at 00:52
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I don't know for sure, but I suspect it is meant to signify a sub-class private non-static variable.
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Michael Garner
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