• sasquatch7704@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    What do you expect? most of the guys in “DOGE” weren’t even alive on 9/11 I’m a bit surprised that they still have something in COBOL, maintenance probably costs o fortune, good luck finding young COBOL devs

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      17 hours ago

      I’m ready to learn COBOL. I will take up the torch. If you know good places to start, let me know. Last time I looked into it it seems way more involved than running stuff like Python, Java, and C.

      • sasquatch7704@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        I see, you want that that Lamorghini, well if you really want udemy is always a good start. Personally the difficult part for me when learning a new programing language is not resources, it’s the motivation to keep do it and I usually need a real project to work on. (10 years + dev)

        Usually you find on github “awesome-XYZ” repos (ex: awesome python, awesome c, awesome go), but for cobol, most of the projects are dead

        https://github.com/loveOSS/awesome-cobol?tab=readme-ov-file#email

    • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Is being a COBOL dev something that can get you jobs?

      I’m pretty good at FORTRAN and would love that kind of “you have invaluable skills so we can’t get rid of you for being queer” gig.

      • sasquatch7704@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        It’s a niche, most of the companies use something more modern, easier to find devs, but there are still some that have to mentain that old code while they probably at the same time try to replace it with some other more common language (Java, C++, Rust, Go), I think it’s still used by some legacy systems in governments and financial institutions

        It’s like knowing an extinct language, most of the time is useless, but if someone needs your skills they better pay good for it.