• @marlowe221
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    10 days ago

    I love doing that…

    Edit - To be clear, since my reply got some upvotes, I meant that I enjoy being the senior developer diving into the legacy code. I actually really like it!

    • @Benjaben
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      510 days ago

      I’ve gotten to spend some time where my major responsibility was to refactor and improve “research-grade” code from some scientists. Felt like tending a Zen rock garden, but code lol, I found it really relaxing and lovely.

    • @BlackPenguins
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      410 days ago

      I enjoy refactoring and making legacy code better.

    • @TunaLobster
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      310 days ago

      I dive into Fortran77 code regularly. Sweet mother of Neptune! All caps and such short variable names!

      • @[email protected]
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        310 days ago

        Used to do that when I was working in science. I also kinda loved it. Just interesting to intimately experience how people thought back in the 80s. There are surprisingly many Fortran 77 libraries still in use today (they can be called from modern Fortran code).

    • infectoid
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      310 days ago

      Same.

      It’s as close to being a doctor as I’m gonna get.

    • @[email protected]
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      2310 days ago

      don’t worry, it takes atmost three months for that fresh code to become legacy code bogged down by decisions done in anticipation of things that never happened :)

  • @cybervseas
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    1210 days ago

    Stamets? “Now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time.”

  • @ChaosInstructor
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    310 days ago

    it can be really satisfying too. remember in late 1998 i got a project to run all by myself. y2k secure a personel administrative system written in cobol running on os/2. for a large company. it was 2.6 million lines of code when i started and 1.8 million lines when it was secured.