Robert J. Bradbury wrote:
> > Billy Brown[SMTP:ewbrownv@mindspring.com] wrote:
> > On a tangential note, you seem to think that large programs are
inherently
> > bad in some sense. Why? A high-quality program is one that does the
> > things I want it to do in a simple and cost effective manner. As long as
> > you have that, who cares if the program is 5 KB or 5 MB?
>
> Oh boy, we can tell what era you learned to program in... :-)
> The first versions of UNIX ran in < 64KB. Compare the Linux kernel
> today with UNIX 25 years ago. It doesn't do that much more but
> it sure is a lot bigger. [And UNIX systems 25 years ago were
> supporting 10-30 users simultaneousy!]
Yes, I know. I learned to program on a TRS-80, and my programs were rarely more than 1K. However, times change.
Twenty years ago it made sense to lavish extravagant efforts on a quest for small, efficient code. The machines of the day were so slow that if you didn't do this, you couldn't make a usefull program. Unfortunately, most programmers still seem to be stuck in that era.
Billy Brown, MCSE+I
ewbrownv@mindspring.com