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  3. Gruff! Gruff! Back in *my* day, programming was hard!

Gruff! Gruff! Back in *my* day, programming was hard!

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  • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

    Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

    Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

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    Marc Clifton
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Brian C Hart wrote:

    Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

    True. On the other hand, it frees my brain to work on solving more interesting problems than memory management, memory leaks, architecture issues that I shouldn't have to deal with in my code, etc. Though Anders Molin (occasional denizen of CP) would agree with you! Marc

    My Blog

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    • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

      Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

      Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

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      J Offline
      Jason Hooper
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      Blah blah blah blah. I'm glad I can spin up a customer-requested program or website in virtually no time at all so we can book the funds and go on to the next project. Programmers have certain things easier, of course they do, that's called technological advancement, but the time saved not chasing down pointer bugs enables us to spend our brainpower (if we want) on building things faster, properly, and doing it right the first time. I did my time coding in assembler back in the day too, by the way. But I would never go back unless it were for embedded systems design, and other obvious uses. Did you ever have to use punchcards or replace vacuum tubes? No, me neither. It's all relative. Never had to remove an actual moth from a computer system as big as a house. We had it much easier than they, when we were kids.

      Jason

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      • D Dr Walt Fair PE

        Brian C Hart wrote:

        (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair"

        So, you're looking for someone to determine which women those are?

        CQ de W5ALT

        Walt Fair, Jr., P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software

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        StM0n
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Like Aragorn said:

        It's the beard…

        (yes|no|maybe)*

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        • J Jason Hooper

          Blah blah blah blah. I'm glad I can spin up a customer-requested program or website in virtually no time at all so we can book the funds and go on to the next project. Programmers have certain things easier, of course they do, that's called technological advancement, but the time saved not chasing down pointer bugs enables us to spend our brainpower (if we want) on building things faster, properly, and doing it right the first time. I did my time coding in assembler back in the day too, by the way. But I would never go back unless it were for embedded systems design, and other obvious uses. Did you ever have to use punchcards or replace vacuum tubes? No, me neither. It's all relative. Never had to remove an actual moth from a computer system as big as a house. We had it much easier than they, when we were kids.

          Jason

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          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Jason Hooper wrote:

          not chasing down pointer bugs

          I never write ponter bugs. 14 years in the Windows Kernel has taught me not to. :)

          ============================== Nothing to say.

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          • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

            Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

            Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

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            P Offline
            Pete OHanlon
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            Amusingly enough, every generation of coder thinks that younger generations have it easier. Every generation is wrong, it's just elitist, revisionist crap. Modern frameworks may make some things easier, but other things are a lot harder.

            Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

            "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

            My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

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            • P Pete OHanlon

              Amusingly enough, every generation of coder thinks that younger generations have it easier. Every generation is wrong, it's just elitist, revisionist crap. Modern frameworks may make some things easier, but other things are a lot harder.

              Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

              "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

              My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

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              G Offline
              Gary R Wheeler
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Indeed. A major part of feng shui in .NET applications (especially with WPF) is learning not to re-invent the wheel. Again.

              Software Zen: delete this;

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              0
              • G Gary R Wheeler

                I've been doing C#, .NET, and WPF programming for a couple years now, and I've noticed something. While they do 'make it easy' in thousands of ways, it's still possible to write a big ole' steaming pile if you're not careful. The good news is that the amenities for cleaning up the mess are much better.

                Software Zen: delete this;

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                B Offline
                BillWoodruff
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                ... it's still possible to write a big ole' steaming pile if you're not careful.

                Amen, Brother, I'd go so far as to say (based on having been a creator of piles) it's easier to write a steaming (or streaming) pile nowadays: I think evaluating whether it's easier to make the equivalent of smear-with-fingers-and-palms-elbows-or-nose kindergarten-finger-paintings-in-code is an interesting question to think on. And, absolutely agree with you that the "amenities" are a whole bunch better, although stuck in my head is the memory of seeing what was possible in SmallTalk on the Xerox Star, back in the early eighties (the source of the ideas Steve Jobs "borrowed" for the Lisa, and then Mac). Aside: Adele Goldberg, the primum mobile of SmallTalk development, later principle of ParcPlace, vehemently opposed the decision of Xerox executives to allow Jobs and friends to visit and see what Parc was doing with ethernet, laser-printers, mice, vector-based fonts, and the whole back-end (Mesa), and graphics display with "icons," etc. best, Bill

                "I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990

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                • B BillWoodruff

                  Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                  ... it's still possible to write a big ole' steaming pile if you're not careful.

                  Amen, Brother, I'd go so far as to say (based on having been a creator of piles) it's easier to write a steaming (or streaming) pile nowadays: I think evaluating whether it's easier to make the equivalent of smear-with-fingers-and-palms-elbows-or-nose kindergarten-finger-paintings-in-code is an interesting question to think on. And, absolutely agree with you that the "amenities" are a whole bunch better, although stuck in my head is the memory of seeing what was possible in SmallTalk on the Xerox Star, back in the early eighties (the source of the ideas Steve Jobs "borrowed" for the Lisa, and then Mac). Aside: Adele Goldberg, the primum mobile of SmallTalk development, later principle of ParcPlace, vehemently opposed the decision of Xerox executives to allow Jobs and friends to visit and see what Parc was doing with ethernet, laser-printers, mice, vector-based fonts, and the whole back-end (Mesa), and graphics display with "icons," etc. best, Bill

                  "I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990

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                  Gary R Wheeler
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  Agreed, on both points. Since .NET and similar frameworks do so much of the 'hard stuff' for you, there's a perception that it doesn't take an expert in the hard stuff to build large, complicated applications. You then end up with 100,000 line systems backed by Access data bases and similar abominations. My use of 'amenities' was a direct reference to the difference in support in Visual Studio between C++ and C#. C++ is inherently difficult to get certain IDE features right, like Intellisense, debugger stack traces, exceptions, and so on in an efficient manner. Some of that too is a lack of will, even animosity, at Microsoft against native development the last several years.

                  Software Zen: delete this;

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                  • P Pete OHanlon

                    Amusingly enough, every generation of coder thinks that younger generations have it easier. Every generation is wrong, it's just elitist, revisionist crap. Modern frameworks may make some things easier, but other things are a lot harder.

                    Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                    "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                    My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    BobJanova
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    I disagree, it really is easier for each generation, as programming languages are still a young field and the language developers are still improving and making things better for us.

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                    • B BobJanova

                      I disagree, it really is easier for each generation, as programming languages are still a young field and the language developers are still improving and making things better for us.

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                      P Offline
                      Pete OHanlon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Rubbish. Ultimately, programming boils down to three things*. That's it. No language can ever improve on those. True, IDEs can help use features through things like Intellisense, etc, but they do not replace the need to be able to effectively apply those techniques. My background is C and C++, but I don't feel the need to sneer at people who've just grown up learning C#. *For those that don't know, programs ultimately boil down to flow, iteration and decision.

                      Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                      "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                      My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

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                      • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

                        Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

                        Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

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                        F Offline
                        Fran Porretto
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        "You young folks don't know how lucky you are. Why, when I was your age, a byte only had two bits -- and they were both ones! We had to do everything in Roman numerals!"

                        Yes, yes, programming was a bit hairier-chested back when (I'm 60 and have been programming since 1967.) Atop that, it hadn't developed quite a few of the specialties we have today. But the emergence of those specialties, which were themselves driven by end-user demand that we make computers actually do something useful and comprehensible, required that we become:

                        • Better programmers,
                        • More knowledgeable about a wider variety of things;
                        • Willing to put down one tool and pick up another when the job requires it.

                        Time was, I wrote microcode for special-purpose non-Von Neumann devices. At that time, I couldn't imagine that that aptitude and those skills might ever become obsolete. But the exploding power of conventional CISC and RISC microprocessors has largely obviated such designs, and the associated programming disciplines.

                        Time was, I wrote quite a lot of assembly language, for dedicated real-time systems and the devices they controlled. That, too, has become rare, once again owing to advances in processor power and the embedded intelligence of the devices under control.

                        Time was, I wrote nearly everything in C. You couldn't get any closer to the machine than C without becoming instruction-set-dependent, and I needed every CPU cycle I could squeeze out of the machines I had to program. Today? C++ is my preferred tool -- and a lot of my younger colleagues tell me I'm an old dinosaur for hanging onto it. They're probably right, at that.

                        Tempora mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis. (Yes, yes: Time was, I used to write a lot of Latin. But I have a special excuse for that...and you don't need to hear it.) At any rate, if there's less hair on our chests...and our code...than there once was, it's mainly a sign of the progress taking place around and beneath us. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to saddle up my horse and trundle off to work. Don't take any wooden opcodes!

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                        • B BillWoodruff

                          Gary R. Wheeler wrote:

                          ... it's still possible to write a big ole' steaming pile if you're not careful.

                          Amen, Brother, I'd go so far as to say (based on having been a creator of piles) it's easier to write a steaming (or streaming) pile nowadays: I think evaluating whether it's easier to make the equivalent of smear-with-fingers-and-palms-elbows-or-nose kindergarten-finger-paintings-in-code is an interesting question to think on. And, absolutely agree with you that the "amenities" are a whole bunch better, although stuck in my head is the memory of seeing what was possible in SmallTalk on the Xerox Star, back in the early eighties (the source of the ideas Steve Jobs "borrowed" for the Lisa, and then Mac). Aside: Adele Goldberg, the primum mobile of SmallTalk development, later principle of ParcPlace, vehemently opposed the decision of Xerox executives to allow Jobs and friends to visit and see what Parc was doing with ethernet, laser-printers, mice, vector-based fonts, and the whole back-end (Mesa), and graphics display with "icons," etc. best, Bill

                          "I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone." Bjarne Stroustrop circa 1990

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                          S Offline
                          Stefan_Lang
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          BillWoodruff wrote:

                          I'd go so far as to say (based on having been a creator of piles) it's easier to write a steaming (or streaming) pile

                          Unfortunately, what used to be just steaming, now is also streaming! :~

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                          • L Lost User

                            Jason Hooper wrote:

                            not chasing down pointer bugs

                            I never write ponter bugs. 14 years in the Windows Kernel has taught me not to. :)

                            ============================== Nothing to say.

                            S Offline
                            S Offline
                            Stefan_Lang
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            Erudite_Eric wrote:

                            I never write ponter bugs

                            _________________^ Your pointer is missing an 'i' - I've found a bug! Are we supposed to believe this is your first, then? ;P

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                            • S Stefan_Lang

                              Erudite_Eric wrote:

                              I never write ponter bugs

                              _________________^ Your pointer is missing an 'i' - I've found a bug! Are we supposed to believe this is your first, then? ;P

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                              L Offline
                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              The compiler checks my typing for me. :)

                              ============================== Nothing to say.

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                              • P Pete OHanlon

                                Rubbish. Ultimately, programming boils down to three things*. That's it. No language can ever improve on those. True, IDEs can help use features through things like Intellisense, etc, but they do not replace the need to be able to effectively apply those techniques. My background is C and C++, but I don't feel the need to sneer at people who've just grown up learning C#. *For those that don't know, programs ultimately boil down to flow, iteration and decision.

                                Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                                "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                                My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                jsc42
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                                Rubbish. Ultimately, programming boils down to three things*.
                                ...
                                *For those that don't know, programs ultimately boil down to flow, iteration and decision.

                                No, programming is like the three main causes of fire: Men, Women and Children. Programming is creating something to help people. If you're not doing that, then what are you doing? How it is encoded is no more important that whether you speak English, Spanish, sign language, or bird calls. The important thing is to get the message from the speaker to the hearer (or, in computing, from your mind into something that the computer can do). Of course newer languages take away the drudgery of mundane housekeeping; but programming is not about being experts in housekeeping, it is about being good at transfering ideas. [Most of the flame wars are about the definition of 'good' - that is out of scope for this response] In the same way that any good carpenter should be skilled in the use of the plane and the lathe, but spends most of his / her time working with pre-manufactured components; so we must understand 'flow, iteration and decision' even though we are much more efficient when using libraries, frameworks, design patterns.

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                                • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

                                  Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

                                  Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

                                  S Offline
                                  S Offline
                                  Steve Naidamast
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  I somewhat disagree with this analysis... Today we have so many "fluff" tools that in my view, it has made programming less straight-forward and more difficult at the same time. The biggest case in point is the proliferation of ORMs against RDBMSs. It used to be, write a query, return a result-set. Now you write a query using the arcane syntax of LINQ (though ENTITY-SQL is available and more straight-forward) simply to access a huge ORM layer, which is also more inefficient than just using a standard DAL to access data. To be fair, I use object array-lists in my applications but they are generated from my own code from a returned data-reader or dataset that is created by my standard DAL. This is a habit learned in the Classic VB days where you transport the lightest amount of data possible. Back then we used arrays instead of array-lists but since array-lists are more flexible I use them now. Still, there is no ORM layer to reduce the overall efficiency of my data access. Many new development tools today add similar levels of inefficiency and increased complexity to do basically the same things we have been doing for years. ASP.NET MVC is another case in point when compared to regular ASP.NET. The promotion of MVC is based upon the "purist" point of view since there is little evidence to support large performance gains between the two. However, today we often hear from younger technicians that MVC is the proper way to program against the Web. Nonsense. There is no proper way to program against the web! It is 1960/1970 technology that has never changed and as a result still uses the same protocols. You can't program around this so no matter what environment you use there are going to be inefficiencies and difficulties. Who cares if Microsoft created ASP.NET to hide certain aspects of web programming. Its hard enough but now we get the added difficulties because techs who have no long term experience to compare new tools with believe that MVC is the way to go. Don't get me wrong, I happen to enjoy programming with MVC very much but I still enjoy regular ASP.NET as much. Sorry but back in the day for me (and I have been in the field 35++ years) things were much less complicated. Younger techs today are simply creating their own difficulties for the sake of new technologies that really don't change much in scheme of things...

                                  Steve Naidamast Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@ix.netcom.com

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                                  • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

                                    Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

                                    Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

                                    E Offline
                                    E Offline
                                    Earl Truss
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    You and your fancy-shmancy compilers and debuggers. Try maintaining a few million lines of real-mode assembler code for 15 years.

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                                    • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

                                      Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

                                      Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      Jim Rootham
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      Different quibble. The song was written by Nigel Russell not Stan Rogers. Story: The first time I heard the song (by Stan) I was in the Groaning Board wearing a suit and tie having just come from a programming contract gig at Xerox.

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                                      • P Pete OHanlon

                                        Rubbish. Ultimately, programming boils down to three things*. That's it. No language can ever improve on those. True, IDEs can help use features through things like Intellisense, etc, but they do not replace the need to be able to effectively apply those techniques. My background is C and C++, but I don't feel the need to sneer at people who've just grown up learning C#. *For those that don't know, programs ultimately boil down to flow, iteration and decision.

                                        Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                                        "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                                        My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        Jared Andre
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        Couldn't agree more, it's all elitist crap. And I HAVE programmed on punch cards (albeit at an early age) fwiw.

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                                        • Brian C HartB Brian C Hart

                                          Grumpy old man time (even though I am early 30s still)...like on the SNL skit Brock! Brock! Brock! Back in my day we didn't have these sissy SSIS packages (programming for babies) and "models," "views," and "controllers," (childs play). We had new and delete and managing memory on the heap! And we LIKED it! I am a C and C++ guy originally and I only do all this modern, "easy peezy" crap o rama like LINQ, MVC, SSIS and C# where you're dragging little objects around and writing some event handlers because "real men programmers" (and "real women programmers") with "chest hair" just don't exist any more Like the Stan Rogers song "The White Collar Holler" says, "Whoa, boy, can'tcha code it? Program it right!" Seriously though, today's programmers have it SO easy.

                                          Sincerely Yours, Brian Hart

                                          N Offline
                                          N Offline
                                          Nunnenkamp
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          Not to mention the IDE's they have nowadays. I had a professor that required us to telnet into the unix server to write our java programs on the VI editor. I eventually got fed up and used a real programming environment, notepad(at least it supported a mouse and the backspace key), then ftp'd.

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