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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Programming languages polyglots: how many languages you know? Post 302225469 by vbe on Friday 15th of August 2008 01:01:22 PM
Old 08-15-2008
15 years ago I had to do some reverse engineering to rewrite in cobol85 a program written in cobol74...
I have heard a lot about NOT using goto like mad and spaggetti code, but never imagined what it could be like until that nightmare day where I was given thig challenge...
I almost went through depression after a week, and so had the help of the top analyst to play " Train " with me for a an extra week just to understand how the damn thing worked...

To give you an idea the goto started on the first line already, you had 400 lines of code
finishing with stop run on last line...

It took me 6 weeks to rewrite the program and almost 1200 lines of code.
But anyone able to read english can maintain what I wrote, and the reading of the first page you knew what and how it worked.
You just cant imagine how bad you feel when as a confirmed programmer you have been reading 3 pages of code not understanding whats going on and still have not seen the end.

OK I learned ( and forgot..) basic and basic clones PASCAL MANTISSE (Mainframe) COBOL
 

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OSALANG(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						OSALANG(1)

NAME
osalang -- information about installed OSA languages SYNOPSIS
osalang [-dlL] DESCRIPTION
osalang prints information about installed OSA languages. With no options, it prints an unadorned list of language names to standard output. These names can be passed to the -l options of osacompile(1) and osascript(1). The options are as follows: -d Only print the default language. -l List in long format. For each language, osalang will print its component subtype, manufacturer, and capability flags. There are eight groups of optional routines that scripting components can support. Each flag is either a letter, meaning the group is supported, or '-', meaning it is not. The letters map to the following groups: c compiling scripts. g getting source data. x coercing script values. e manipulating the event create and send functions. r recording scripts. v ``convenience'' APIs to execute scripts in one step. d manipulating dialects. h using scripts to handle Apple Events. For descriptions of the groups and the APIs in each of them, see <http://developer.apple.com/documentation/mac/IAC/IAC-361.html>. -L Same as -l, but also prints the description of each component after its name. SEE ALSO
osacompile(1), osascript(1) Mac OS X May 1, 2001 Mac OS X
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