16'x29' free-form 14K gal IG gunite pool; SWCG & sodium hypochlorite 8.25%; Hayward SwimClear C4025 cartridge filter; Hayward SP3202VSP TriStar Variable Speed Pool Pump; custom test kit based on Taylor K-2006C; city; PF:8.6
memories of college when I took Fortran IV level G and had to submit punch cards! Back then they told us not to bother with Cobol because it was a dead language. For a dead language it's doing pretty good 40 years later!
I have Java for breakfast these days with cream and sugar!
(I'll behave now but I can't vouch for polyvue)
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Fortran IV, Pascal (Waterloo!) , PL/I, COBOL, and, for the last 28 years, SAS. If you are in Clinical Trials, you are writing in SAS, Oracle, or SQL/Server--or in something that talks to one of those 3--or all 3!
Carl
I still have nightmares about PL/1!![]()
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
I actually enjoyed PL/I a great deal, but the IBM manuals were absurd. I wanted to know how to do something, and no manual or text covered it. I finally called a friend and he had the answer...I then went back to the manual and there was NO WAY I could have gleaned how to do what I wanted to do from that. Hated Cobol, hated Fortran IV almost as much.
Carl
Stayed away from Cobol since I was a chem major at the time I was taking computer courses. Took to fortran like a duck to water. It just made SENSE!
So did SPSS. PL/1 and APL were not intuitive at all.
As far as databases go, back in the day I had my own data company (after a stint as a machine language programmer for a small software and hardware firm) and we did custom databases in dBase and "desktop publishing" in Wordstar (anyone remember CP/M?)
I was going to switch my major to computers but my advisor said not to because there were not enough jobs to go around and there were more programmers around then they would ever need!
Realize this was in '73-''74 and was WAY before the PC (OR Apple or Commodore or Trash80 or Atari even exited (There weren't even home video games, let alone cell phones, then--we played pong and asteroids in bars by dropping in quarters!)
Good memories!
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Evan, I remember those days--WordStar was the first PC word-processor---I was a main-framer until the late '80's. I learned the Wang word processor system then, to learn to use a PC, someone gave me a copy of MultiMate, which looked just like the Wang system.
Since I started programming with Pascal, I actually picked up PL/I because I needed a dynamic linked list for a client's ap and SAS isn't designed for such dynamic data structures. PL/I was like a real-world version of Pascal, and the syntax is virtually the same as SAS, so it was a natural.
APL was simply insane. Statisticians loved it because you could invert a matrix in about 5 characters. SAS had PROC MATRIX which could do the same in about 20 characters. (Replaced by IML and I NEVER saw anyone use IML--too hefty a license fee).
FORTRAN IV drove me crazy with the GOTOs you had to use. But I could write in it.
Then there was that nightmare called....JCL...! (I was actually good at it but it was like having to hot wire your car and twist wires together to get the turn signals to go on, or the horn to blow).
Carl
Did I start this hijack?
I was going to ask waterbear if the punch cards he alluded to earlier in the thread were made of stone but thought better of it. I might need to ask him a question sometime.
College for me meant projects written in RPG II, BAL 360 and COBOL (mostly) but the IBM's System 36, if I recall correctly, didn't use JCL and changes were made via a single-line (?) editor entitled X-Edit.
My first programming assignment entailed COBOL pgm debugging (only a wuss needed to rely on Abend-Aid, right?!) and rewriting JCL and BMS mapsets/panels. Got to write the first micro-computer program for the company I worked for -- they just dumped a new IBM PC XT on my desk and said to make it talk to the mainframe. (Thank you, Irma! Bored?)
Left programming for the lower echelons of project management in the early 1990s and have been proudly unproductive ever since.
Last edited by polyvue; 06-21-2010 at 03:49 AM.
16'x29' free-form 14K gal IG gunite pool; SWCG & sodium hypochlorite 8.25%; Hayward SwimClear C4025 cartridge filter; Hayward SP3202VSP TriStar Variable Speed Pool Pump; custom test kit based on Taylor K-2006C; city; PF:8.6
Looks like down home days for old geeks!
Yep, I've done punch cards. But it was in high school and what we liked was the punch litter which was great for prank confetti. I'm an error prone typist and I HATED the lack of a backspace on the cards them selves.
PoolDoc
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