Sujet : Re: The joy of FORTRAN
De : 186283 (at) *nospam* ud0s4.net (186282@ud0s4.net)
Groupes : alt.folklore.computers comp.os.linux.miscDate : 30. Sep 2024, 03:38:25
Autres entêtes
Organisation : wokiesux
Message-ID : <xD2dnSerYr-8kmf7nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@earthlink.com>
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User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.13.0
On 9/29/24 1:42 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
On Sun, 29 Sep 2024 01:28:01 -0400, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
And COBOL is STILL with us, just under the skin. Lots of those 60s
pgms writ by narrow-tie horn-rim-glasses Dilberts STILL doing their
thing.
They are disappearing, one way or the other. Companies that are still
insisting on sticking to that legacy code gradually going out of business
or being acquired, and having that technical-debt-ridden stuff superseded
by more modern stuff from the parent company ...
Do you think PayPal, Ebay or TradeMe use COBOL code to manage their
financial transactions? Of course not.
The need for those old COBOL pgms is bound to
diminish over time. I don't think anyone writes
NEW complex COBOL apps anymore, haven't for a
long time. A lot of once-popular langs have
eventually disappeared.
Here's a list :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_programming_languages How many are STILL in common, or ANY, use ? Each thought
they had the Better Idea - but, really, not so much. Hey,
I kinda liked ALGOL-68 ... should I write some 50,000 line
biz app using it ? :-)
ONE math guy from the old days used "APL" - but he
was the ONLY one I ever knew of.
Additionally, the (dangerous) "online-everything"
cuts in to ANY apps writ to run on your (thinner
and thinner) central system.
Have NO idea what PayPal/EBay/etc use. If they're
smart they'll kinda HIDE that. Whatever it is,
it's probably translated into 'C' at some point
to build the final executables.
FORTRAN will probably go on for a long time still.
It's tuned for engineers/scientists/mathies and
there are a megaton of libs and docs. Python is
so handy/ubiquitous that it'll hang on for a
long time too. 'C' underlies almost everything.
JavaScript will probably survive for quite awhile
as well ... alas ........