Will you C & C a new cinquain poem Coding for LC's database poem?

For LC database poem
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Allgn4hb2rEDFSwC1Rt2UzTsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20111215193823AAg9Weu

cinquain 2-4-6-8-2 beats, no rhyme, clear picture or story~

~
Coding
By Victoria Tarrani
© 201112.15

input
binary stream
ones and zeros needed
hexadecimal translated
data

follow
each step by step
coding must be perfect
open file, don’t close it, lose it
rewrite

make calls
to library
use small sections stored there
return to program continue
coding

go to
stored data bits
DLL location
remain unless code takes you back
to start

complete
execute file
debug mistaken lines
find simple error in coding
rerun

perfect
it obeys you
exactly as written
open, close file, data is safe
knowledge

I am
and proud to be
a geek who loves debug
find and correct the nits of code
edit
.

2011-12-16T13:27:36Z

* I was debugging an Assembler Language program, and it returned with no heading. The code was right, it was just in the wrong line of code and was over written.
* While working heavily in COBOL I was at an ice cream store with my (then) fiance. I saw a sign and wondered why they had written it in COBOL. I chuckled, then laughed at myself. The sign said:
On ramp closed
use Grossmont Blvd.
The condition and the solution, not COBOL at all, just too much tutoring and studying it.
* I received a Yahtzee game from a friend who had not backed up the game before playing it. I spent many nights going through the code (at that time I had the tools) and working on the math to get it to work. One night it was perfect. Everything worked. I saved it as yahtzee.bak then used the yahtzee.com file to play the game. Created a batch file to over write the ".com" file with the ".bak" file and zeroed the scores. Many people got a copy of the three files and played them. The thinkin

2011-12-17T17:04:56Z

The thinking person's no-brainer game... :-)

2011-12-18T18:19:00Z

There are so many great answers that I am delighted. We techno-geeks do have our days. It was a lot of fun for me to write because of the memories of coding, which I enjoyed.

Application programming has changed significantly since I was coding. With the advent of Visual tools it took the fun out of it for me, but it simplified writing code for a lot of people. Logic was not required since the code blocks were already written, you simply had to pick what object you wanted. However, at the system's level, it is still fun.

I appreciate the advice and comments from all of you.
tori
~

2011-12-18T18:29:42Z

I loved TBO's 1's and 0's walking about the ceiling. Gene, what a delightful response; a real cliff hanger -- exactly how I felt every time I compiled and ran a program. HH, I look forward to your event driven coding poem! Really! Thanks, B.C., I didn't know you were a techno geek either, but going back to the ENIAC shows you do know. LC, I'll hang out with you anyday! We can recompile to our hearts' content. Tigger, you have been there. I got so tired of the all-nighter's fixing systems, and you know how that is. Hey Dallas, you remind me of the time I finally understood that not everyone wanted to know HOW it worked, just that it worked. Thanks, Billy. I think this poem shows my background too. Ben, I checked carefully to be sure there were no "that's" in the poem. I'm getting paranoid about it. Dear Elf Monkey, thanks so much! Thank you Gigi, glad I could clear something up for you. Thanks Bethany, I appreciate your new understanding.
~

2011-12-20T20:59:11Z

Thanks Jess and Lemonade. I'm glad you each got a new understanding of what makes a program, and sometimes a poem, work.

Thank you all for your support and enjoyment.

Merry Christmas (or joyous holiday, no matter what you celebrate) and a healthy, wealthy new year to you.

Tori

Nat2011-12-15T21:36:29Z

Favorite Answer

Go to the front of the line, Tori.
This poem had me on the edge of my seat.
I had no idea you were a computer whiz.
You leave me in the dust.

gigi2011-12-18T23:13:29Z

Thoroughly enjoyable work!

I'm not a programmer, but I know you are. You showed exactly what could happen with a faulty line of code.

The part about a file left open and data lost explains why I have lost information and now have automatic save on. I could not have figured it out.

Also, I think the cinquain format is perfect for this poem, it reads like a program would, I think. As if each section is a DLL library that you make a call to rather than go to. This program works great and won't crash!
.
Thanks.
.

?2011-12-19T20:23:32Z

Your turned a program into something that I could understand. Blocks of cinquains are like blocks of code, or DLLs. Right?

In your poem, I read it several different ways. One in order, two I jumped around, three from the bottom up. It works.

It is a poem for every coder.
.

?2011-12-16T11:28:00Z

This can work for many years, and then one morning at 03:00, the program goes KaBoom! and some poor soul is awakened to fix the bug hidden deep in lines of mangled code

?2011-12-19T05:28:23Z

You made this really fun, especially with the details that you added.

I followed it as it were code, and it is perfect. I'll bet you were very good at debugging. You are a great editor, I know. Cute how you put that together.

All of the answers just add to the charm.
.

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