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What is COBOL used for?

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    Its a old programming language used for programming business applications and i can only say that i am glad i dont have to use it anymore!! :-)
    – Jagmag
    Sep 26, 2010 at 7:03
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    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COBOL Sep 26, 2010 at 7:13
  • Either Moses' comment is a perfectly valid answer, hence my +1, or you'll have to be much more specific. What kind of 'what'?
    – BoltClock
    Sep 26, 2010 at 7:34
  • Not quite the same question, but pretty much answers your question Unmentioned parts of COBOL histroy
    – NealB
    Sep 27, 2010 at 14:57
  • If the one COBOL programmer I know is anything to go by, a very comfortable semi retirement...
    – seanb
    Oct 13, 2010 at 21:23

8 Answers 8

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COmmon Business Oriented Language 'invented' by Grace Murray Hopper ( read about her she is one one of the pivotal people in the development of computing as we know it today). The general idea was to produce a language that was English based as opposed to mathematically based or expressed as such in the code.

Very simply put you would use a construct like

ADD YEARS TO AGE

as opposed to

age = age + years

or

age += years

Appearing in the early 1960's it was massively adopted for processing in the area of business. There are still a large volume of applications built in COBOL still running and maintained and it is still very much alive and kicking. Around 1997 Gartner reported that 80% of the world's business ran on COBOL with over 200 billion lines of code in existence and with an estimated 5 billion lines of new code annually. So you could do a lot worse than learn COBOL to ensure you have a job for life.

The structure of a cobol program is summarised in the Mnemonic In Every Damn Program. Meaning that there is an:-

  • Identification Division giving information about the program
  • Environment Division describing the hardware
  • Data Division (In my day we used CODASYL now better known and newly re-invented as no-sql
  • Procedure Division 'Here be code'

Because of the legacy from punch cards (yes i used them as well) you always started the code by indenting 8 spaces in else some compilers would not recognise it (shades of Python where whitespace is significant).

It is of course a compiled language.

Where is it used. Governments, the Military Businesses of all sizes but usually the larger corporates so i suppose you could say everywhere and it is used to run governments, and the Military and business's. I believe the US's social welfare system runs on several million lines of Cobol written in the mid 60's. Experian a large UK based credit rating company uses it throughout there operation with interfaces to the web. Again in the UK most of the Building Societies and Banks run their core systems on it.

I could go on but i won't go and read about it. And by the way you can even get Object Oriented Cobol if you want

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  • First Cobol standard was Cobol-60. Work was going on since 1959 formally, and it drew on prior art. It wasn't 'invented' by Admiral Hopper: she ran the project.
    – user207421
    Sep 26, 2010 at 7:45
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    I think it drew heavily on FLOW-MATIC and i put the invented in inverted commas to sort of indicate that Grace didn't really invent it. It was of course put together by a committee much in the same way as we still do. There is nothing really original and of course COBOL grew out of work that had been done before in one form or another. On a minor note to all her other achievement Grace was the last US Navy officer who had served in WW2 to retire from the navy. Sep 26, 2010 at 8:26
  • Plus 1 just for the statement Procedure Division 'Here be code' A blast from the past, twenty something years of fighting c.o.b.o.l. dragons Sep 6, 2017 at 15:50
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Ever use a credit card? Your transaction is probably touching COBOL code on the backend.

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The Right Tool for the Right Job

Batch

The most salient point about COBOL is not its verboseness. It is that it was primarily designed, as a language, to do batch processing. Its I/O functionality in that regard is exceptionally efficient.

Even though it predates OOLs by a geological epoch, it is useful when speaking to a modern-day OO programmer to describe batch programming and COBOL from an OO point of view. Describing it like this, though historically incorrect, helps OO programmers conceptually.

To wit, the utterly fallacious, and yet very true:

COBOL has been "optimized" to iterate over large, nay, vast sequential "collections" (i.e. batches, also known as files). In fact, it is so optimized, that all the OO functionality has been stripped out, leaving a basic API that opens files, processes records, and closes files. In more complex version of the basic algorithm, multiple files are opened, their records matched to each other and manipulated to produce one or more output files (batches).

Where COBOL was co-opted for non-batch processes, for instance pseudo-conversational programming (backing up CICS "green" screens - aka BMS), it was least suitable. Not surprisingly, it is this functionality that has been most quickly replaced by GUI apps written in OOLs.

The Editor

The ISPF Editor on IBM mainframes has been optimized to handle the kind of coding COBOL requires. The basic unit of manipulation in the editor is the line. By default, vertical alignment is static and not flowed or shifted based on context; typing to the end of a line results in a keyboard lock. Because of this "conservation of vertical alignment," it is relatively easy to duplicate lines or blocks of lines, and align commands. With COBOL vertical alignment, as a legibility issue, is of greater importance than OO languages.

It is difficult to describe in a post, but having facility in both programming worlds and with both types of editors, I have to say that I would not want to edit COBOL in an IDE style editor, and I would not want to edit Java and C-family languages in an ISPF Editor. (I imagine you can plug-in an ISPF style editor into the various IDEs, but I haven't had the need to go there.)

N.B. OO COBOL has its uses, but not as a new way to re-engineer code that handles batch processing.

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From my, although limited experience, COBOL is used a lot with IBM mainframe systems. So I believe in any situation where I/O is the emphasis (as mentioned above financial systems, insurance companies, government, etc) to the extent that a mainframe is needed or preferred and has been around for a while COBOL is probably used. I say been around for a while since in modern day I do not hear much of COBOL being a go to language.

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Cobol is used primarily for financial processing. Any time banks, brokerage houses, credit card vendors, et al are doign business, there will be Cobol in the mix.

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The ANSI standard for COBOL and some compilers have evolved considerably in the last 15 years and include libraries for creating and operating web frame contents and interactive sites, for data communications, for running on small processors and devices used in the hand. Well known versions are prefixed with characters like MF, CIS, RF, RM or the names of computer mainframe manufacturers old and new for versions in use primarily in Data Processing computer installations.

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Today COBOL is used only because it used to be popular back in the day, and many old large businesses don't want to re-write their code into a modern language. (mainly cost + time)

The maximum length of a line of COBOL code is 72 characters long, why you ask? Because that's how many holes there were in punch cards. Even still the language hasn't been updated to allow for longer lines...

COBOL is an evil, ancient language that has little use any more, unless you are extending OLD programs...

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    According to this article from a couple of years ago (which has good citations of the facts it presents) "There are around 200 billion lines of COBOL code in use" and "Around 5 billion lines of new COBOL code are added to live systems every year". Yup, sounds pretty dead to me! ;-) Oct 11, 2012 at 0:42
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    A wildly inaccurate group of statements. Cobol is still used because it works well in the business domain, it has nothing to do with rewriting and everything to do with being a good fit. The 72-char line length is just silly ignorance, format free source is support by all the current compiler vendors and AFAIK, most of the free ones, going back decades. Cobol is as useful as any other general purpose language and it is truly impossible for a language to be evil...except Basic... Jul 30, 2013 at 3:38
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    Another nit to pick, punched cards were actually 80 columns but 8 were used for sequencing (if you've ever dropped a tray if cards you'll understand) leaving 72, in the early days that is.
    – RFlack
    Dec 25, 2013 at 10:48
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COBOL is used for Business applications. Fortran is for scientific apps. C and C++ for hardware and firmware. Java for the web.

Then you may ask, why COBOL? Well, COBOL is about ten times easier to program for business than any of the other languages.

For example, to move a numeric to a report field and format it as a currency:

   MOVE VAL-A TO REPORT-FIELD-A.

There are no getter or setter methods needed. No need to program two methods for each MOVE statement.

And all the changing to string characters, and formating to $99,999.99 IS automatic. Try that in any of the other languages.

The dirty little secret is that COBOL is really a glorified ASSEMBLER MACRO language. There is even a compiler option to print the assembler code. That makes it easy to understand and powerful.

COBOL: Easy, quick, accurate, readable and maintainable. Everything a boss could ask for.

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    COBOL - a glorified assembler macro language? I don't think so... Just because a compiler can produce an assembler list does not make it an assembler macro processor. Some of the other blanket statements regarding how various languages are used seems to be a little dogmatic as well.
    – NealB
    Jul 12, 2013 at 19:55

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