I've read some books about software engineering, like Pressman, R.S.: Software Engineering, A Practitioner's Approach. And now it's clear why the big enterprice projects are still using COBOL. It's ECONOMY!
When a project is big and complicated, tasks like planing, developing and testing got bigger and bigger share. It's not rare to see a COBOL-project where coding is less than 20% of total hours allocated.
So even if programmer productivity is eventually boosted up by a NEW LANQUAGE something like 10 - 20 percent, total savings are quite minor: only 2 to 4 percent gained. That doesn't justify conversion to an another lanqueage - which is by the way a major moneysucking event.
Cheers, Humu
When a project is big and complicated, tasks like planing, developing and testing got bigger and bigger share. It's not rare to see a COBOL-project where coding is less than 20% of total hours allocated.
So even if programmer productivity is eventually boosted up by a NEW LANQUAGE something like 10 - 20 percent, total savings are quite minor: only 2 to 4 percent gained. That doesn't justify conversion to an another lanqueage - which is by the way a major moneysucking event.
Cheers, Humu