Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Leap years
Message
From
13/07/1998 02:08:10
 
 
To
13/07/1998 00:45:51
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Coding, syntax & commands
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00115008
Message ID:
00116691
Views:
20
>What's interesting here is the current rate of change in
>the programming world. I started programming in 1964 in
>Fortran. I would guess that basic programming techniques
>hardly changed for the next twenty years. I got involved
>with micro-computers in 1980 using Basic. Still not much
>change there other than more interaction with the user.
>Later on dBase II and DataFlex were different and better
>because they integrated a relational database. SQL was
>doing the same thing in the mini & mainframe world.

I got involved with micros back in '78 using Basic, Asm, and Forth. I still think back on my "Trash-80" with fond memories. Did a lot of real-time stuff on micros (MODCOMP, PDP11, VAX) with Fortran and Assembler, then got into dBaseII, III, III+, Fox, FoxPro etc, in the early 80's to today on PC's.

>
>Given this picture it is understandable why code written
>in the 70's and 80's would still be in use.
>
>But now O-O programming and the web are really shaking
>things up. A twenty-year forecast for programming techniques
>made in 1970 would have been generally correct in 1990. I
>would shrink from making any forecasts for programming in
>the year 2020!
>
>Peter

I wouldn't even want to hazard a guess about how long a piece of code may last even by 2005! At its current shrinking rate of obsolesence (sp?), it may only be needed to last, oh say, 5-10 days! Then again, we may not need to WRITE code, only THINK of it. Imagine the FP commands then:
SET TELEPATHY ON
etc.
I know I'd need SET STUPID OFF. ;)

Me: Delete MyMostImportantStuff.
Computer: Are you sure?
Me: Yes.
Computer: Are you really, really sure?
Me: Yes!
Computer: Files MyMostImportantStuff deleted.
Me: Wait...damn!

Do what I mean, not what I say... whoops, that's what I tell my kids now! If computers don't listen any better than they do, we're all in trouble!
Fred
Microsoft Visual FoxPro MVP

foxcentral.net
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform