Interesting article on the future of COBOL ... perhaps a COBOL to Ruby
translator would ease some pain?
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=266228
Interesting article on the future of COBOL ... perhaps a COBOL to Ruby
translator would ease some pain?
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=266228
My guess is that the need to use COBOL has to do with the present investment these companies have in systems already.
I highly doubt that organizations that are newish are using it (or if they are it's minor in comparison to older orgs).
Now, I do think that a translator would be super cool though.
Andy
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
Interesting article on the future of COBOL ... perhaps a COBOL to Ruby
translator would ease some pain?IT news, careers, business technology, reviews | Computerworld
--
Andrew Libby
Tangeis, LLC
Innovative IT Management Solutions
alibby@tangeis.com
Andrew Libby wrote:
My guess is that the need to use COBOL has to do with the present
investment these companies have in systems already.
I highly doubt that organizations that are newish are using it (or if
they are it's minor in comparison to older orgs).Now, I do think that a translator would be super cool though.
Andy
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
Interesting article on the future of COBOL ... perhaps a COBOL to Ruby
translator would ease some pain?IT news, careers, business technology, reviews | Computerworld
A COBOL refactoring IDE written in Ruby! Sounds to me like
meta-programming at its finest. At one point long ago, I thought it
would be a good idea to learn COBOL, but I gave up on it and stayed with
FORTRAN and assembler. Then all kinds of interesting things happened,
like character sets including lower case, the Cuban Missile Crisis,
System\360, and the Vietnam War. Maybe now is a good time to take up
COBOL again.
Could you say COBOL is a domain-specific language for maintaining COBOL
legacy code?
<ducking>
Don't dismiss all of the ideas in COBOL so quickly. For decades it has been the only mainstream language to do decimal arithmatic. It also has some excellent page formatting capabilities, also missing from mainstream languages.
All of this can easily be done in Ruby, unlike many other languages.
-- Matt
It's not what I know that counts. It's what I can remember in time to use.
On Sun, 15 Oct 2006, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
A COBOL refactoring IDE written in Ruby! Sounds to me like
meta-programming at its finest. At one point long ago, I thought it
would be a good idea to learn COBOL, but I gave up on it and stayed with
FORTRAN and assembler. Then all kinds of interesting things happened,
like character sets including lower case, the Cuban Missile Crisis,
System\360, and the Vietnam War. Maybe now is a good time to take up
COBOL again.Could you say COBOL is a domain-specific language for maintaining COBOL
legacy code?
Matt Lawrence wrote:
A COBOL refactoring IDE written in Ruby! Sounds to me like
meta-programming at its finest. At one point long ago, I thought it
would be a good idea to learn COBOL, but I gave up on it and stayed with
FORTRAN and assembler. Then all kinds of interesting things happened,
like character sets including lower case, the Cuban Missile Crisis,
System\360, and the Vietnam War. Maybe now is a good time to take up
COBOL again.Could you say COBOL is a domain-specific language for maintaining COBOL
legacy code?Don't dismiss all of the ideas in COBOL so quickly. For decades it has
been the only mainstream language to do decimal arithmatic. It also has
some excellent page formatting capabilities, also missing from
mainstream languages.All of this can easily be done in Ruby, unlike many other languages.
Ah ... so Ruby is not mainstream? Perhaps an ability to refactor legacy
COBOL will make it mainstream in spades!!
I always wondered why decimal arithmetic was built in to microprocessors
from day one, while floating point was added only later. Now I know ...
more COBOL legacy code than FORTRAN legacy code.
Page formatting? Isn't that built into Perl, which I think is
"mainstream"? "Practical Extraction and *Reporting* Language", right?
On Sun, 15 Oct 2006, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
Matt Lawrence wrote:
Don't dismiss all of the ideas in COBOL so quickly. For decades it has been the only mainstream language to do decimal arithmatic.
PL/I, RPG, and Ada from Ada 95 on. And they all avoided the horrible botch in COBOL's precision handling that was not fixed until COBOL 2002 (and is still only optionally fixed).
--
John W. Kennedy
"The blind rulers of Logres
Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue."
-- Charles Williams. "Taliessin through Logres: Prelude"
Ah ... so Ruby is not mainstream? Perhaps an ability to refactor legacy
COBOL will make it mainstream in spades!!
Ruby is just starting to become mainstream. There are still a lot of computer people who haven't even heard of it.
Page formatting? Isn't that built into Perl, which I think is
"mainstream"? "Practical Extraction and *Reporting* Language", right?
Page formatting in Perl is nowhere near as powerful and easy to use as what is provided in COBOL. I don't know many perl programmers who use it regularly.
-- Matt
It's not what I know that counts. It's what I can remember in time to use.
On Sun, 15 Oct 2006, M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky wrote:
I always wondered why decimal arithmetic was built in to microprocessors
from day one, while floating point was added only later.
Actually, no. Decimal arithmetic in microprocessors goes back to the original market that Intel invented microprocessors for in the first place -- desk calculators.
--
John W. Kennedy
"The blind rulers of Logres
Nourished the land on a fallacy of rational virtue."
-- Charles Williams. "Taliessin through Logres: Prelude"
Not to mention quite a few implementations of SQL. Certainly a
mainstream language albeit not a full programming language.
On 10/14/06, John W. Kennedy <jwkenne@attglobal.net> wrote:
Matt Lawrence wrote:
> Don't dismiss all of the ideas in COBOL so quickly. For decades it has
> been the only mainstream language to do decimal arithmatic.PL/I, RPG, and Ada from Ada 95 on.
--
Rick DeNatale
My blog on Ruby
http://talklikeaduck.denhaven2.com/