Help us defend against VMS!
Larry McVoy
lm at arizona.edu
Fri Mar 4 12:35:27 AEST 1988
In article <717 at cresswell.quintus.UUCP> ok at quintus.UUCP (Richard A. O'Keefe) writes:
>In article <4080 at megaron.arizona.edu>, lm at arizona.edu (Larry McVoy) writes:
>> I agree with the rest of the article but this part is not completely
>> true. VMS fortran is the de facto industry standard. Until I can have
>>
>If this is so, it would be interesting to know why Fortran 8X does not
>resemble VMS Fortran. For example, both let you define record types,
>but the syntax is very different. IBM's FORTVS doesn't seem to have
>copied much from VMS Fortran either, I've carefully checked a recent
>IBM Fortran manual and couldn't find any of the features that make
>VMS Fortran so sexy. Apollo's Fortran hasn't any of the VMS extensions
>that I know of. "de facto industry standard"? Maybe on Vaxen.
And how many cycles do you think apollos spend chewing on fortran? Or
ibm's?
Let me put it this way: consider the type of people that use fortran.
Look at what fortran those people use. Just because unix has f77
does not make it a fortran oriented machine (also read: f77 is not
the selling point of unix). To beat a dead horse: would you buy
an apollo to run fortran? Or a sun for that matter? Or an ibm?
I think that you should ask fortran hackers what sort of fortran they
want, not Unix/C hackers.
--
Larry McVoy lm at arizona.edu or ...!{uwvax,sun}!arizona.edu!lm
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