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Thank you Marc and Buck
Much appreciate your feedback.
The key information I am hearing is to use C appropriately and
in a disciplined manner.
One can then leverage on the existing large C skill-set and
bring on expertise to the IBM i that would not usually be available,
at the same time I would introduce the C experts to the power
and simplicity of RPG and so have a win/win situation all round.
I think I have stumbled onto an interesting avenue to explore.
Thanks to all who have replied.
Regards
Frank
date: Tue, 11 Feb 2014 16:11:48 -0800
from: Marc Hunter <marc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: Re: [C400-L] C coding
We do a lot of C++ coding and primarily benefit from its
cross-compilability between with windows and Linux (if you do it in a
disciplined fashion). It also allows us to leverage existing tools and
skill sets across the organization. We even use it for a fair bit of
database access as we've wrapped the SQL api's into a nice reusable
object. That said - most of the coding in our department is 'tools' coding.
HTH,
Marc
On 2/10/2014 2:45 PM, Buck Calabro wrote:
On 2/10/2014 4:59 PM, frank kolmann wrote:AS400.
So I am prompted to ask, is anyone doing serious coding in C on the
ofAnd if so what is the application and more interesting to me what style
--C code is being used?I have C code in production that I used for ASN.1 serialise/deserialise
operations. Also, for socket operations. Both of these are wrappered
so that ILE RPG programs can call the functions.
Today I'm not sure I'd recommend using C for sockets; there are plenty
of RPG examples these days (thanks Scott!) But there are some
programming chores which C works well for, AND for which one can find
examples on the web.
Generally speaking, I do all my IBM i database work in RPG. I'd use C
for tool / interface type work. At home I use C to program PIC
microprocessors; another chore that uses no database. ish.
--buck
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