Dave Horsfall scripsit:
Rear Admiral Grace ("Amazing") Hopper PhD
was given unto us in 1906. She
was famous for coining the term "debugging", whereby a moth was removed
from a relay contact in a *real* computer[*].
Well, no. The moth incident happened in 1947, and the OED lists the word
"debugging" as first appearing in print in 1945 in a British journal.
Hopper may or may not have known that: certainly she was consciously
punning on the existing word "bug", which went right back to Edison's
laboratory and first appeared in print (per the OED) in 1889.
However, she must be condemned for giving us COBOL;
yes, I know that vile
language,
I know it too, and there is nothing blameworthy about it. We wouldn't get
far nowadays without records, and they first appeared in Cobol (or rather
its direct ancestor Flow-Matic) in 1959, more than a decade before any
other programming language had them. Longer, if you accept that PL/I
would not have taken the shape it did if Cobol had not existed. Yes,
Cobol is clunky and archaic; lots of people think Lisp is archaic too.
But it met a need at a particular time, and very successfully so.
The pseudo-readability was meant, at least by Hopper herself, to help
customers rather than managers understand the code.
--
John Cowan
http://www.ccil.org/~cowan cowan(a)ccil.org
Big as a house, much bigger than a house, it looked to [Sam], a grey-clad
moving hill. Fear and wonder, maybe, enlarged him in the hobbit's eyes,
but the Mumak of Harad was indeed a beast of vast bulk, and the like of him
does not walk now in Middle-earth; his kin that live still in latter days are
but memories of his girth and his majesty. --"Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit"