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What programming languages did you study?

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12 hours ago, Rob_Ainscough said:

The same can be said about programming languages

Rob,

When I started programing I was doing Assembly and Fortran using punch cards and when I retired a couple of years ago we were using Julia to build our models.  Yea, I know I'm old. 🤣


I Earned My Spurs in Vietnam

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I will never forget the thousands of cards I punched. I had decks that were in excess of 5000 cards and you never wanted to drop one. Glad those days are over. 

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Thank you.

Rick

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3 minutes ago, 188AHC said:

I will never forget the thousands of cards I punched. I had decks that were in excess of 5000 cards and you never wanted to drop one. Glad those days are over. 

yes, 1974, IBM 360, Fortran.....

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31 minutes ago, Rob_Ainscough said:

I'm lucky, I missed the punch cards by 1 year ... PDP-11/44.

250px-Pdp11_44.jpg

4MB memory limit, 16bit addressing ... powerful!!

Cheers, Rob.

yes, 1976, PDP 8, paper tape and booting the machine by loading the boot program with switches

Edited by yurei

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I did the card thing too... horrible. 


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My very first "programming" adventure on the IBM360 was to use the console to toggle in "Hello World" and have it print out on the line printer. I had the same professor for Fortran IV, COBOL and RPG one semester. He used essentially the same exercise in each language for all three classes. I turned in one of assignments where I had used RPG for the I/O, COBOL sub-routines for the database, and Fortran IV sub-routines to handle the math... All three classes covered in one program...

...he was not really amused, but conceded that I had in fact completed the assignment in a unique way and allowed it to stand as satisfactory. He just stated "Don't do that again" in my classes!

I had a real mind-bender when I took two semesters worth of Lisp... :blink:

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I programmed in Cobol, Basic, RPG, Fortran, and machine.  Actually, it was fun at the time but I'm glad it's over now.

Many years ago I wrote a complete accounting package in Basic on a Commodore Pet with 4k of memory and a tape drive. Boy, I thought I was something.😁

Now it seems as if programs are starving if they don't have 16gb of memory. It's been wonderful to have lived through this life of computer development . Young people today have no idea.😊

 

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Thank you.

Rick

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OK. I got caught up in talking about our computer histories and got somewhat off topic. I apologize.  I blame Bluestar. He started it.😁

However, our conversation does tie in with the subject at hand, "What developers want" but that's a stretch.  I promise not to do it again.

I will give myself 12 hours of suspension for being bad. Please forgive me.

 

 


Thank you.

Rick

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EAA 1317610   I7-7700K @ 4.5ghz, MSI Z270 Gaming MB,  32gb 3200,  Geforce RTX2080 Super O/C,  28" Samsung 4k Monitor,  Various SSD, HD, and peripherals

 

 

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17 minutes ago, n4gix said:

.. two semesters worth of Lisp... :blink:

Lisp was very interesting...Lua is actually very similar.

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Timex Sinclair...


Please contact oisin at milviz dot com for forum registration information.  Please provide proof of purchase if you want support.  Also, include the username you wish to have.
 

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umm....timeline by programming language...

1973-1974 Basic and Fortran on IBM 1130 (some dabble in RPG) my first program was a Turing machine emulator

1974-1976 Fortran IV  and LISP on IBM 360

1975-1977 PAL 3 Assembly language on PDP-8

1980-1985 Basic on HP 85/86 (wrote a lot of math software for mapping industry on these)

1985-1989 Basic on DOS based IBM PC 

1989-1996 the "modern" era of Windows

1992-1993 my first network based on Windows NT 3.0

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and now back to the current time xD we have started with Scala in the first years during computer science studies (2013-2017) and then moved on to Java together with some a basic course in Assembler to learn how it is all working on the lower end xD. In my spare time I have teached myself C#


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I thought it couldn't get any better when we went to an IBM 370 running on DOS.

One of the things I liked about COBOL was the ability to do my sorts in the JCL.  

I also thought BASIC was a very good language with a lot of power.  On one trip from NYC to SFO I wrote a program in it to see how many digits of 4ATAN(1) it could calculate. I got to 2^15.  I figured to get the program to go any farther I would have to lie to it.  🙂

 


I Earned My Spurs in Vietnam

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I started with a comodore 64, you used magnetic tapes to read and save your code..

Then Cobol, Fortram, Pascal and C++. Learned later Visual Basic, Clarion, Java, JavaScript, and many others.

Lately. NET C# and VB, I think it is fair to say we developers learn anything after the first 2 languages are mastered, it always amaze me our ability to adapt, specially when you look back in time as per this thread.

I wonder what would be 25 years from now, specially with the speed of changes with current technologies.

My hats off to all of you.. 

Regards,

Simbol 

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I'm probably one of the few people here under the age of 30 who knows the difference between a floppy and a stiffy and has seen and worked with both.

Edited by JB3DG

Jonathan "FRAG" Bleeker

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If I speak for my company without permission the boss will nail me down. So unless otherwise specified...Im just a regular simmer who expresses his personal opinion

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