Path: utzoo!yunexus!geac!geaclib!daveb From: daveb@geaclib.UUCP (David Collier-Brown) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Portability and the Ivory Tower (was Re: Book on Microsoft C) Message-ID: <3805@geaclib.UUCP> Date: 30 Mar 89 02:32:41 GMT Article-I.D.: geaclib.3805 References: <28587@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU> Organization: GEAC Computers, Toronto, CANADA Lines: 27 > mcdonald@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu: > "Portability" is a word seldom heard outside the academic discussions > of Usenet. > From article <28587@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU>, by jas@ernie.Berkeley.EDU (Jim Shankland): > Third, it's not the *users* who pay the price of non-portable code > (at least, not directly); it's the software vendors. To give a real-world example of this, consider Interleaf. We have one product that runs on Unix, MicroVax-VMS and Aegis, with slightly older versions of the product running on these plus the Mac OS and PoisonousComputer DOS. If we were in the business of writing inefficient code, we would NOT still be in business. If we wrote non-portable code we wouldn't be as big. In my last job I was writing code for a Vax 8650 and Suns, with a Sequent or a Amdahl/IBM lurking in the wings. Its **almost** easy. --dave (and I didn't even write TPS) c-b -- David Collier-Brown. | yunexus!lethe!dave Interleaf Canada Inc. | 1550 Enterprise Rd. | He's so smart he's dumb. Mississauga, Ontario | --Joyce C-B