On Sat, 12 Dec 2015, tulsamike3...@gmail.com wrote:
So did you have to learn how to read the punch hole cards also or did the punch hole cards go into the computer and than printed out the data on the fan fold paper also was it in code or just plane English?

Yes.

If you dealt with the cards long enough, or consciously tried to, you learned the punch patterns. They were not complicated.
or
you could make a printout
or
you could feed the cards through an INTERPRETER, which printed the card content on the card. The usual INTERPRETER used a larger font, and only printed 60? of the columns. If you had unusual needs for which columns to print, or wanted to rearrange, etc., then you could program it with a plug-board. You kept some of those plug-boards around for specific tasks. For many years, I kept around a plug-board labelled "COBOL INTERPRETER", just to prove that a COBOL interpreter was possible :-) There was also a sb-model of the 029 punch series that was a "punch/interpreter". It could take a card, or a deck thereof, and print the content of the card along the top. It had a significant advantage over the INTERPRETER in that it printed 80 columns, aligned with the columns of punches in the card.

On "normal" cards (not round-hole, system3, film-window, etc.), there were 80 columns (numbered 1-80), and 12 rows (X,Y,and 0 through 9).
[When I die, bury my remains face down, 9 edge first]
Text was encoded with a punch in Y, X, or 0 plus a punch in 1 through 9.
Special characters and punctuation were other combinations. Lower case was generally not used. Other punch combinations were possible, and occasionally used, such as raw binary codes. Punching out all punches in a column or columns created a "lace card", which wasn't liked by the reader. "/*" in the first two columns had special meaning for 360 JCL, which required some extra care when attempting C compilers.



on the fan fold paper also was it in code or just plane English?
Only in the aerospace industry would you find people who spoke in plane english. Everybody else preferred it "plain".

--
Grumpy Ol' Fred                 ci...@xenosoft.com











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