Re: The tragedy of SQL

From: Rob Sargent <robjsargent(at)gmail(dot)com>
To: Michael Nolan <htfoot(at)gmail(dot)com>
Cc: "pgsql-generallists(dot)postgresql(dot)org" <pgsql-general(at)lists(dot)postgresql(dot)org>
Subject: Re: The tragedy of SQL
Date: 2021-09-14 16:20:43
Message-ID: 0e6963ec-b433-3376-7f79-e37b1e7f83ec@gmail.com
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On 9/14/21 10:10 AM, Michael Nolan wrote:
> I started programming in 1967, and over the last 50+ years I've
> programmed in more languages than I would want to list.  I spent a
> decade writing in FORTRAN on a GA 18/30 (essentially a clone of the
> IBM 1130) with limited memory space, so you had to write EFFICIENT
> code, something that is a bit of a lost art these days.  I also spent
> a decade writing in COBOL.
>
> I've not found many tasks that I couldn't find a way to write in
> whatever language I had available to write it in. There may be bad (or
> at least inefficient) languages, but there are lots of bad programmers.
> --
> Mike Nolan
> htfoot(at)gmail(dot)com <mailto:htfoot(at)gmail(dot)com>
OK, I'm maybe responsible for this thread turning into a diatribe.  I
shouted at OP 'cause he shouted at us. My mistake, and I apologize.
I'm probably closer to Mike's "bad programmers" than I would care to
admit but fully believe software is a "people problem" more than most of
us realize.

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