A useful relic if you need multiple edit sessions is REXX/CICS EDIT.

The editor is more like XEDIT than ISPF but at least you don't need the
huge address space that TSO requires.

File transfer up and down to/from PDS and flat file is simple.

Since most of my work is in CICS, the toolset is great for TSQ management
and simple CICS panel prototyping.

I mainly use REXX/CICS to front-end the IBM CICS IVP transactions.

In an earlier role, we used Eclipse / Java Apps to build COBOL/BMS and DB2
DDL. FTP was the pull/push method for code.

On Sat, Mar 17, 2018 at 2:34 PM, David Crayford <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 17/03/2018 9:27 AM, Bernd Oppolzer wrote:
>
>> The motivation for the RDz migration was:
>>
>> a) some problems of isolation of source codes which have been
>> checked out from other developers (this has been fixed partially
>> in the meantime, and it can be fixed totally by moving all sources
>> to the DB2 repository and making the checkout datasets private
>> and protected)
>>
>> b) the hope that younger developers can be moved to mainframe
>> development by a more "modern" IDE (but they aren't interested,
>> anyway ... they simply don't want to learn PL/1 and such things,
>> which they consider hard).
>>
>
> We've been quite lucky that the young guys we've hired have been adaptable
> and pick up
> the mainframe pretty quickly. One guy we interviewed thought ISPF was cool
> in a kind of retro way
> like the old 8-bit games that are back in fashion. One thing they all
> universally detest is JCL. I suppose
> if you come from a bash or powershell background it may seem a bit alien.
>
>
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-- 
Wayne V. Bickerdike

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