On 28/11/2016 2:14 PM, Jack J. Woehr wrote:
David Crayford wrote:

He does! We all do. Most of the people whinging about EBCDIC on here also work on *nix systems. EBCDIC is a terrible anachronism but unfortunately we're stuck with it.

I do indeed play on *nix. I came to traditional IBM record-based business systems from the Land of Nix.


In my time I've worked on many different systems. Mainly MVS and it's descendants but also AIX and AS/400 machines. AS/400 is also an EBCDIC platform and shares the same woes as z/OS, but has the benefit of being tightly integrated with AIX so can spawn a process to run native in AIX which is all good. I've ported many open source projects to z/OS over the
years and EBCDIC is the killer.

I do not whinge about EBCDIC. EBCDIC is part of the austere and idiosyncratic nature of traditional IBM record-based business systems.

I find such idiosyncracies charming, much as some unfashionable aspect or attribute of a beautiful woman accentuates her beauty.


EBCDIC is no beauty! She's an ugly hag! Medusa comes to mind with every snakes head being a different EBCDIC code page. I recently received an e-mail from a sysprog at a Danish bank asking me if it was possible to enable my z/OS Lua port to handle a Scandinavian code page. I hacked up a solution but running iconv to convert source modules added significant overhead
to a fast language.

I whinge about scp because that comes from my world and IBM mis-implemented it on z/OS!


Don't whine! If you're unhappy with scp then why don't you port it to do what you want?

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