Capt Kirk
Pre-Flight
1972. Learned Fortran in College. Cobol, too.
Man am I old.
Bruce,
If that doctor thing doesn't work out let me know....we are always looking for good FORTRAN coders.
:<)
Len
1972. Learned Fortran in College. Cobol, too.
Man am I old.
Bruce,
If that doctor thing doesn't work out let me know....we are always looking for good FORTRAN coders.
:<)
Len
...though I don't remember anything special about column 6
I'm thinking "continued from last card", but I could be wrong. I believe the last time I touched any Fortran code was 1983 when I was fixing bugs in the original version of Palasm, Vince Coli's (MMI) attempt at an assembler for his company's programmable logic devices (PALs).
Andrew,
Millions of lines of code...the application has been around for 20 years at an average of about 20 hard core coders developing new stuff every day during that time...it is also very mission critical processing...a lot of stuff in the core system is old and so re-writting it means making sure the new version is just a solid as stuff that has been doing its job day in and day out for a long time.
We are moving to Itanium running OpenVMS.
We have real time processing....we do everything via web services including accepting account update information and financial transactions 24/7/365. We can pull in the financial transactions even while the batch process crunches through the pricing and posting of today's transactions (mutual fund processing, can't actually process the trades until the price is set and that happens only once a day for most funds). We also have hot sync to a fail over copy of the database with all the industrial strength disaster recovery stuff you would expect...that gets tested once a month when we do periodic maint on the primary cluster...of course with the DEC...er...I mean HP clusters we also have fault tolllerance within the primary data center as well.
Have you started thinking about capturing the business rules, building the vision for the next iteration of the system, and so on? Have you considered staying with FORTRAN for a period of time?
ooo pick me! pick me!
Too old to remember programing the format drum on the keypunch (with a punched card of course)? Or dropping the whole box of punched cards (with nary a sorter in sight) that represented your feverish attempt over the last 28 straight hours to finish the assignment on time, and being unable to decide between crying, laughing, or screaming?
Man,, I did some Pascal, and then took a shower.
My first real job out of college required a little diddling in COBOL. Just enough to be dangerous on a VAX. I bet some of the youngsters on this board don't even remember using cassette tapes for memory. I remember comparing one of those huge (8" - who knows) floppy disks )for a CP/M computer to a cassette and laughing -- clearly the disk would let you play tic-tac-toe faster!!!!!!!!!!!!!!