We're potentially going to take on a customer that has an old algorithm in Cobol that we can use as a reference. I only really knew about the language passingly. The first example I find and it turns out that ADD has scope - anyone know what impending nightmare is coming our way?
A colleague found this quote: “The use of COBOL cripples the mind; its teaching should, therefore, be regarded as a criminal offence.” - Edsger W. Dijkstra. I'm hoping that there could be some good anecdotes from our more seasoned programmers :D
@roganjosh Dijkstra was a completely different type of Dutchman from van Rossum. I never met him, but he had a reputation for not suffering fools gladly. And boy, was he smart. A man of definite opinions he was, as your anecdote suggests, uncompromising in his beliefs.
@roganjosh How much code? COBOL is arcane ...
I could consult for you, but your management wouldn't pay the rate ;P
It's a full model they have built. I only know through my boss that's in talks with this company but it looks like it basically runs their entire production scheduling process.
@holdenweb Ha, I feel like we'd hire you and there'd be a lot of rituals to decode the model. I recommend you, next thing we're all sat around a campfire chanting in Latin :P
Most likely it will either be intuitive and straightforward (pray that's the case) or written by some fiendish "efficiency" expert who didn't care how obscure the code got as long as it executed 2% faster.
Anyway I don't have the time to take on consulting assignments right now what with the job and the Nutshell.
I think we just need to get the spirit of the model and ditch the reference code. Apparently they have people that can help us with the COBOL but I think it'll be too extreme to try understand. This isn't a small company, either, so I wouldn't put it out of the realms of 100k+ lines of code
How is the new version of the book going, holdenweb?
@Pherdindy Did you ever find out what the CSV problem was?
@roganjosh I was going to say "should have put a smiley in there," then I noticed I did. And if you need a steer on the COBOL I did used to teach it. One year the project was a juke box with search by band or title. That was 1983, IIRC. COBOL was definitely not the language for projects like that.
I can kill you repeatedly in Duke 3D later if you have time - I think that'll allow you repentance :p
that or you could help out with writing what's looking like a 60 page document about some system's processes and procedures that no one's going to bother reading anyway :p
@JonClements I started with Python about the time 1.5 was due. I'm very glad I don't have to use Python 1.4 any more, but 1.5 was enough to convince me that Python had a future and I needed to suport that future.
@JonClements There was never any intention that 3.{0, 1} should be used in production. In essence they were "shakedown`' releases.
@holdenweb might be interesting to see if some of the old 1.x stuff is still about and compilable...
@holdenweb was disappointing for a major version though... didn't help that it just (imho) made everyone think - oh okay, we're sticking with 2.7 then.
(I also guess that since you could mostly import future stuff anyway - and appreciate what was coming up - you didn't need to move to a new major version that wasn't "quite there yet")
anyhows... I'm going to take a break and see if there's anything new on netflix - there's normally some new releases on Friday's so being a Saturday there might be something... we shall see...
Ummmmm. I just aborted a sudo before entering my password and then the next sudo didn't ask for a password at all. I can't reproduce it anymore though. Should I report this somewhere...?
What actionable information can you provide? You would be providing a data point, so it might be worth making a report (preferably in a self-doubting tone).
@JonClements I thought "cool, I can really get started writing those Python 3 classes now"
@Aran-Fey I didn't see whether you ever got a sensible response on that "Asspression in named argument value" question. The default value is computed at definition time, so the assignment happened in the global namespace. Which is why asking whether it's in the local namespace gets false. y is being looked up as global from inside the function body.
People would know what it meant, but I can't think of the last time someone said "Oh, that's a bit tart". I'd associate that with my grandparents I think. Maybe it's used more down south
I've got a new favourite advert. "So you think all Hyaluronic acids are the same?" is its opening gambit. Err, I'm not sure what I thought about Hyaluronic acids, but apparently this one is 50 times smaller (just LOL)
In any case, it's Nadine Baggot or bust for my beauty face creams. She was the voice behind pentapeptides and she told me they were the hottest new anti-ageing agents. Before her I was just rubbing my face with steaks to get the protein.