Douglas Eadline wrote:
Young pretenders to FORTRAN's throne.
http://arstechnica.com/science/2014/05/scientific-computings-future-can-any-coding-language-top-a-1950s-behemoth/?kw=100k_pvs&search=100k_pvs
Somewhat myopic view of the "possibilities." A pretty good
description of the languages it covers (Fortran, Haskell,
Clojure, and Julia) Really misses on C/C++ and some other
things like OpenMP, MPI to name a few. I like Julia BTW,
seems to be the right mix or pragmatism and performance.
I also find this reoccurring notion that HPC needs to run out
and replace Fortran with something else kind of silly.
Fortran is doing just fine, thank you. And if you
can make a case or have a requirement for some other
language, then use what works for your requirements.
What has happened is that Fortran has evolved at the slow
speed required to keep legacy code running while
including conservatively the useful features of newer
languages without compromising speed too much.
These right compromises have given Fortran the advantage
for a better survival than richer but finally too short
lived languages. With a slow evolution legacy and well
tested code can be adapted, so survives.
It is funny that the ArsTechnica article illustrates
newer languages (Haskell, Clojure, Julia) with the
stupid but elegant recursive Fibonacci code which would look
as well stupidly elegant and short in contemporary Fortran
but that is not shown. Yet Fortran understands recursive functions
since long, at least Sun Fortran 20 years ago as I recall.
Dan
When young programmers make snide remarks about
Fortran and rewriting codes in modern languages,
I ask them if they also considered replacing
the old copper plumbing in their house (or parents house)
because there are modern products like Pex. I don't
even wait for an answer. I just tell them to get off
my lawn.
--
Doug
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Doug
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