:: Re: [DNG] What languages are actual…
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Autor: Curtis Maurand
Data:  
Dla: dng
Temat: Re: [DNG] What languages are actually used?

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> On Nov 11, 2024, at 6:02 AM, Didier Kryn <kryn@???> wrote:
>
> Le 11/11/2024 à 11:49, Alessandro Vesely via Dng a écrit :
>>> On Sat 09/Nov/2024 10:08:27 +0100 onefang wrote:
>>>
>>> file --brief /usr/*bin/* | grep " script" | cut --delimiter=',' --fields=1 | sort | uniq --count | sort --ignore-leading-blanks --general-numeric-sort
>>>        1 a sh script
>>>        1 PHP script
>>>        7 Tcl script
>>>        8 Lua script
>>>        24 Ruby script
>>>        105 Python script
>>>        203 Bourne-Again shell script
>>>        220 Perl script text executable
>>>        364 POSIX shell script

>>>
>>> The Lua count might be higher than normal, since I'm a Lua fan and have a
>>> lot of it installed. Everything else is likely typical proportions.
>>
>>
>> Cute! I don't know how I managed to completely miss Lua:
>>
>>       1 a /bin/mksh script
>>       1 a php script
>>       1 a /usr/bin/gap -q script
>>       1 a /usr/bin/gjs script
>>       1 GNU awk script
>>       2 a /bin/dash script
>>       2 a sh script
>>       3 a /usr/bin/fontforge -lang=ff script
>>       5 Tcl/Tk script
>>       7 Tcl script
>>      35 Ruby script
>>     134 Bourne-Again shell script
>>     259 Python script
>>     538 Perl script text executable
>>     591 POSIX shell script

>>
>>
>> Best
>> Ale
>
>     I understand you're talking about programs "installed" (with respect to "used") on your PC. But the applications which matter most for you and me aren't even installed on our PCs but in various industries, among which the one industry which runs the highest number of applications is the bank; and their applications are mostly written in COBOL, and you can trust them. I would change bank if I learned they were managing my account in PHP of Bash.

>
> --     Didier

>


I worked in insurance in an IBM house and IBM is big on Java, still. They’ve been big on porting a lot of cobol code to Java. I M has written tools to port over Cobol code. They don’t work, but they’re trying.

Our policy management system called Point-in-C is now Point-in-Java.

Cheers,
Curtis