• bulwark@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I wouldn’t be mad about it, I hear there’s big bucks in the arcane languages.

    • stinkycheese@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      The money pays for an individual’s knowledge in the arcane language, rather than the fact they use it.

      • brsrklf@jlai.lu
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        10 months ago

        It’s been a while since I was told this, so not sure how true it still is, but there a was a niche but lucrative market for people who could maintain stuff in Fortran, COBOL and the like.

        Because there were some critical antediluvian pieces of software in banking, big businesses, etc that some companies were terrified of having to replace one day.

        I’d expect that by now most would have migrated to more common languages, but I don’t really know.

        • yggdar@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I’m in IT in the financial industry. There is indeed still a ton of COBOL around.

          • brsrklf@jlai.lu
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            10 months ago

            I guess some things never change, quite literally.

            I’ve only worked for a bank for a few months, and it was on a new service project, so no idea what made the old finance workflows tick. For all I know it was the same there.

        • noerdman@feddit.deOP
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          10 months ago

          I heard that story, too… When I started studying. That was almost 20 years ago. I’d have assumed they had moved on until now if that hadn’t been an urban myth in the first place.

          • f314@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I work at an insurance company, and our core business system is written in RPG. We are starting the process of splitting it up and modernizing it, but I suspect there will still be some RPG code running in production in ten years.

    • noerdman@feddit.deOP
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      10 months ago

      Guess that’s an indicator for the language being much less interesting than your parents thought each other were.

      • digger@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        I don’t know. My dad is only slightly more interesting than a stack of punch cards, and I love him for that.

  • Rob@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    There could be a version of this where it hands out Bubble, Merge, Quick, and Bogo. It is, after all, the Sorting Hat :⁠-⁠P

  • Bonehead@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Pity the poor bastard that gets RPG. I still have nightmares about that damned column decoder sheet.

      • dalekcaan@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Not to mention what you can charge being one of the few people who can still write COBOL

        • aubeynarf@lemmynsfw.com
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          10 months ago

          Writing the COBOL probably isn’t the hard part. Reading 60 year old code that had to run in 16k of core to figure out what slice of business logic it contributes… yeah.

    • datendefekt@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      I used to laugh about COBOL, who can take it seriously, right? But now that I’m working in a larger company I can assure you that COBOL is the backbone of large industry. Aviation, finance, railway operations, insurance, you name it. We’re talking software running nonstop for decades.

  • Artyom@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I’d be happier to be a fortran programmer than a java programmer tbh. It’s a great language.

    • noerdman@feddit.deOP
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      10 months ago

      To be honest, the first draft of this had the Shakespeare Programming Language in the last panel but the test audience (ie my co writer) had never heard about that one, so I changed it to something that wasn’t necessarily bad but rather just old and no longer really in use.