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COBOL Programmer
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General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00043666
Message ID:
00043974
Views:
67
>>>You folks are cracking me up with this COBOL stuff. I cut my teeth on COBOL and did it on VAXes for years while teaching myself dBase, Clipper, Fox and now VFP.
>>>COBOL is not going to go away anytime soon. Hell, my wife is a mainframe programmer for the IRS and she'll undoubtedly make her career doing COBOL for them for the next 25 years until she retires.
>>>
>>>With all the talk about whether VFP is going to be around or not, maybe everyone ought to give some thought to teaching yourselves COBOL....hehehehehe.
>>>
>>>Steve Despres
>>
>>Well, to continue the more serious side of this thread... where would you start? I'm self-taught in every language I know (except Pascal). But it's usually been a sink-or-swim lesson. I've never worked near COBOL programmers and I've never seen it. What's it like, say compared to Pascal, or C or even Fox?
>>
>>Matt
>
>Matt,
>
>To be frank, I wouldn't bother to start. Attempts have been made over the last 10 years to create a "Structured COBOL", but personally I consider the phrase to be an oxymoronism. There are some things that you have to do via the dreaded GOTO.
>
>Many COBOL programs bear little, if any, resemblance to anything you're use to seeing. Line oriented (line has a line number) and everything's in one big program. The file structures are defined at the beginning of the program, but after declarations regarding the operating environment. The closest thing that you might have seen is old BASICA programs.
>
>George
I don't know COBOL, but I saw it when my father started using it when the IRS switched to it from assembler (in the early '80s!). It looked a lot like all the other vanilla languages I had seen before I discovered the event-driven world in the mid '90s. That is to say, it looked like PASCAL, PL1, FORTRAN77, and Microsoft BASIC for DOS. All the stuff about IF THEN ELSE, DO WHILE, READ, WRITE, and everything else I learned in programming 101. My father won't take advantage of this golden opportunity, because when he retired in '88, he put it all out of his mind.
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