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Re: Hey De - Did it snow up there?

By: Decomposed in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 08 Dec 20 6:41 PM | 26 view(s)
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Msg. 09648 of 58648
(This msg. is a reply to 09637 by Zimbler0)

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Zimbler0:

Re: “700 lines just to do the 'hello world'? I've never had it that bad. ”
I'm exaggerating a little, but COBOL has pages of mandatory sections at the start off every program - sections on what the program is about, who you are, what the source computer is, what the object computer is, who the customer is, what the variables are and how they're used, etc. By the time you can do the least little thing, you've already got a big program on your hands - unless you've skipped over those sections and created what authorities would say is a bad program. Then the language itself is incredibly verbose, reading more like a book than a concise language.




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Gold is $1,581/oz today. When it hits $2,000, it will be up 26.5%. Let's see how long that takes. - De 3/11/2013 - ANSWER: 7 Years, 5 Months


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: Hey De - Did it snow up there?
By: Zimbler0
in 6TH POPE
Tue, 08 Dec 20 3:43 PM
Msg. 09637 of 58648

Decomposed > The most impressive projects my son has seen are under 700 lines! When I was a kid, that was about the length of a 'Hello, world!' program in COBOL.


700 lines just to do the 'hello world'?
I've never had it that bad. But then punch cards were being phased out just a year or so before I went to college. And I never was exposed to Cobol.

Fortran in college - and it looked more like BASIC than the fortran of punched card infamy. Add in some programmable calculators (My buddy and I were doing ballistic calculations in Physics on them) then hand assembling baby programs for the 6800 microprocessor . . . Then off to work where mini-computers and first generation PLC's were the order of the day. And digital logic circuits.

Anyway, memory lane. What a trip.

Zim.


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