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    The OFFICIAL programming thread

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    • TazzT
      Tazz @Jam
      last edited by

      @Jam said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

      So . . . .

      SQL was initially developed at IBM by Donald Chamberlin and Raymond Boyce. It was initially called “Structured English Query Language” (SEQUEL) and pronounced “sequel”, though it later had to have it’s name shortened to “Structured Query Language” (SQL) due to trademark issues. It was created to supplant the then popular QUEL database language, and the name “sequel” was meant as a pun (it was the sequel to QUEL). However, this leads to the big question – was language still called “sequel” after the name change?

      Answer here:

      Pronouncing SQL: S-Q-L or Sequel?

      So, it turns out that My Ess-Cue-Elle is the more official way to pronounce MySQL. We work with the Oracle MySQL team a couple times a year and that is how they say it.

      Depends on its pronoun

      GTFO

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JamJ
        Jam
        last edited by

        I suppose in a way that is true.

        It can be My Ess Q El, but it can be your My Sequel, or vice-versa, lol,

        "laissez les bons temps rouler!"

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • KilemallK
          Kilemall Careful, railroad agent
          last edited by

          It’s used interchangeably in my department.

          https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

          Never go full Lithu-
          Twain

          No editing is gonna save you now-
          Wingmann

          http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

          http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • TazzT
            Tazz
            last edited by

            @Kilemall I’m sure this news is making its rounds in the medical field. How is this even possible?

            https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/health/houston-hospital-halts-liver-and-kidney-transplants-after-learning-a-doctor-manipulated-some-records/

            GTFO

            KilemallK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Gators1G
              Gators1
              last edited by

              197b4a48-7433-45b7-9902-9fa7a6b0985c-image.png

              alt text

              PakoonP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • KilemallK
                Kilemall Careful, railroad agent @Tazz
                last edited by

                @Tazz said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                @Kilemall I’m sure this news is making its rounds in the medical field. How is this even possible?

                https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/health/houston-hospital-halts-liver-and-kidney-transplants-after-learning-a-doctor-manipulated-some-records/

                Doctors are to the medical field as fighter pilots to air forces. They are watched like hawks though by hospitals for things like this, note they saw higher failure rates so probably a QA oversight software trigger caught him. Usually it’s going to be a problem like physicians prescribing themselves drugs that causes lower outcomes, this twist was probably a surprise.

                From a software security perspective, if he was running the transplant program he would have legit access to make changes.

                So the combo of fighter pilot carte Blanche, a trusted physician with access, and time for the outcomes to trigger review explains it to me.

                https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

                Never go full Lithu-
                Twain

                No editing is gonna save you now-
                Wingmann

                http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

                http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                • PakoonP
                  Pakoon @Gators1
                  last edited by Pakoon

                  @Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                  197b4a48-7433-45b7-9902-9fa7a6b0985c-image.png

                  The My part is pronounced Myy. It’s a Swedish girl’s name.

                  One of the Moomin characters is My

                  Little My - Wikipedia

                  Little My - Wikipedia

                  ♙♙♙ Michael Waltz added you to the group.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Gators1G
                    Gators1
                    last edited by

                    Should you trust the government though?

                    US Government declares the safest programming language

                    alt text

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • ?
                      A Former User
                      last edited by A Former User

                      It’s not a very ergonomic language despite their efforts to make it so but I got a lot out of learning Rust. The first weeks / months where you are fighting with the compiler as it teaches you Rust is the hardest but eventually it clicks and you stop trying to do things the “wrong” way. It’s worth it for how it opens your eyes to the pitfalls in other system languages because every time you get a compiler error you tend to think, “what’s the danger with that?” You usually figure it out and after a while you start feeling a growing horror at how potentially unsafe a lot of non-Rust code is.

                      Gators1G KilemallK 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • Gators1G
                        Gators1 @A Former User
                        last edited by

                        @Hog said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                        you start feeling a growing horror at how potentially unsafe a lot of non-Rust code is

                        That’s exactly what the government wants you to think! Meanwhile Rust was made by the NSA with all kinds of backdoors!!!

                        alt text

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • KilemallK
                          Kilemall Careful, railroad agent @A Former User
                          last edited by

                          @Hog said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                          It’s not a very ergonomic language despite their efforts to make it so but I got a lot out of learning Rust. The first weeks / months where you are fighting with the compiler as it teaches you Rust is the hardest but eventually it clicks and you stop trying to do things the “wrong” way. It’s worth it for how it opens your eyes to the pitfalls in other system languages because every time you get a compiler error you tend to think, “what’s the danger with that?” You usually figure it out and after a while you start feeling a growing horror at how potentially unsafe a lot of non-Rust code is.

                          Mainframes win again- the OS locks the average peasant out of the dangerous instruction sets through APF authorization.

                          https://www.quora.com/Is-the-average-IBM-mainframe-application-inherently-more-secure-than-the-average-cloud-application-or-is-it-simply-security-through-obscurity

                          https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

                          Never go full Lithu-
                          Twain

                          No editing is gonna save you now-
                          Wingmann

                          http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

                          http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

                          ? Gators1G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ?
                            A Former User @Kilemall
                            last edited by A Former User

                            @Kilemall What Rust really addresses is a more a whole host of failure and attack vectors around memory. Not so much gatekeeping what a legit program can do.

                            This is 2019 data but it’s the type of thing Rust was designed to address:

                            Microsoft: 70 percent of all security bugs are memory safety issues

                            You can code safely in C and C++ but it takes both a lot of experience and immense amount of discipline and I’d be surprised if even the above-average developer had completely memory safe code in any large code base.

                            KilemallK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • PakoonP
                              Pakoon
                              last edited by

                              Is Baldwin behind this?

                              ♙♙♙ Michael Waltz added you to the group.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • KilemallK
                                Kilemall Careful, railroad agent @A Former User
                                last edited by Kilemall

                                @Hog said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                                @Kilemall What Rust really addresses is a more a whole host of failure and attack vectors around memory. Not so much gatekeeping what a legit program can do.

                                This is 2019 data but it’s the type of thing Rust was designed to address:

                                Microsoft: 70 percent of all security bugs are memory safety issues

                                You can code safely in C and C++ but it takes both a lot of experience and immense amount of discipline and I’d be surprised if even the above-average developer had completely memory safe code in any large code base.

                                A better explanation of APF authorization…

                                What is the authorized program facility?

                                Because this security kicks in BEFORE the OS loads, if you screw up the libraries or the LPA you can literally lock the system up to where you cannot bring the system up. This is why you ALWAYS define a rescue LPAR that also has access to the same disks so you can fix the problems and come up without epic IBM assistance.

                                https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

                                Never go full Lithu-
                                Twain

                                No editing is gonna save you now-
                                Wingmann

                                http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

                                http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Gators1G
                                  Gators1 @Kilemall
                                  last edited by

                                  @Kilemall what kind of FPS does your mainframe get though? Can it play Skyrim?

                                  alt text

                                  KilemallK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • KilemallK
                                    Kilemall Careful, railroad agent @Gators1
                                    last edited by

                                    @Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                                    @Kilemall what kind of FPS does your mainframe get though? Can it play Skyrim?

                                    I wouldn’t run game clients under z/OS but under a Linux LPAR. Not sure how you would get display though, pretty much no such thing as video card to monitor.

                                    I think they could be awesome game servers with a main game server and VMs that run the players’ machines. They could interact with memory speed interfaces IBM has been working on for years, then you would have a thin client on the player’s machine.

                                    Bit expensive though.

                                    https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

                                    Never go full Lithu-
                                    Twain

                                    No editing is gonna save you now-
                                    Wingmann

                                    http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

                                    http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • Gators1G
                                      Gators1
                                      last edited by

                                      Party is almost over. I guess I will take my savings and go be a tuk tuk taxi driver in Cambodia with Hog.

                                      GitHub Copilot just got promoted to Captain

                                      alt text

                                      ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • ?
                                        A Former User @Gators1
                                        last edited by A Former User

                                        @Gators1

                                        Gemini tells me there’s no need to fear (just yet).

                                        The video then discusses the potential impact of Copilot Workspace on programmers. The video argues that Copilot Workspace is a productivity booster for experienced developers but can only build trivial things for the average person. In other words, Copilot Workspace is not going to make programmers obsolete but rather make them more productive.

                                        The video ends with two reasons to be optimistic about the future of programmers. First, Copilot Workspace requires knowledge of how to read and understand code to use effectively. Second, throughout history, programming has become easier with the invention of new tools, yet the demand for programmers has never declined.

                                        Seriously though, I hope by the time it’s ready to replace me I’ll have retired anyway. That may be too optimistic. But either way, I think I’ll be far more saddened over the fact that’s it’s made a hobby I love pointless. And, yeah, I could say screw it and just keep coding for the enjoyment of it but if it’s easier to describe the problem in 25 words and have an AI generate it then I won’t be motivated to.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • ?
                                          A Former User
                                          last edited by A Former User

                                          There are some one-off tasks I fire up Powershell for because they are a pain in the arse to do without a dedicated tool and can’t as easily be done in “one” line in a terminal with other languages.

                                          This is an example:

                                          Get-Content .\deliveries.csv | ConvertFrom-Csv | ConvertTo-Json | Out-File .\deliveries.json
                                          

                                          I find PowerShell ugly to work with for larger scripts (probably no more so than bash), but as a general purpose command line tool it’s brilliant sometimes.

                                          KilemallK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • KilemallK
                                            Kilemall Careful, railroad agent @A Former User
                                            last edited by

                                            @Hog said in The OFFICIAL programming thread:

                                            There are some one-off tasks I fire up Powershell for because they are a pain in the arse to do without a dedicated tool and can’t as easily be done in “one” line in a terminal with other languages.

                                            This is an example:

                                            Get-Content .\deliveries.csv | ConvertFrom-Csv | ConvertTo-Json | Out-File .\deliveries.json
                                            

                                            I find PowerShell ugly to work with for larger scripts (probably no more so than bash), but as a general purpose command line tool it’s brilliant sometimes.

                                            I just implemented a powershell command because our usual utility software has a limit we didn’t know about. It’s stupider then the usual utility but good enough and likely backwards compatible enough to stay working past my retirement.

                                            https://i.imgur.com/hX2CMMZ.jpg

                                            Never go full Lithu-
                                            Twain

                                            No editing is gonna save you now-
                                            Wingmann

                                            http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/72217/DSC_2528.JPG

                                            http://s3.amazonaws.com/rrpa_photos/20416/PTOB 101_resize.jpg

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