and that's yet another way to end up with hard to read code.
Variables hold values that have meaning. Learn how to name things and you'll write good code.
edit: someone just wrote an article along these lines. The only thing I'd change is the cause-effect relationship between bad names and bad code. IME bad names lead to bad code, not usually the other way around. The reason is that by starting from good name choices, it's much easier to have a well structured code. And not rarely, bad names lead to mangled up code that screams for a refactoring.
To each their own. But man imagine if you have a collection of stuff that has a large name, and then having to figure out a short name other than e when iterating. I hope you're not iterating over chemical names 😬
Well in a vacuum yes sure, you're right, but in practice there's always some context. x and y could be referring to axes, where an addition makes little sense. However lhs and rhs make more sense if you're overloading an operator