Margaret Hamilton, NASA’s lead developer for Apollo program, stands next to all the code she wrote by hand that took humanity to the moon in 1969

  • Troy@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    It’s probably written in Fortran66 or similar. No semicolons, but so many line numbers…

      • Hypersapien@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        For people unfamiliar with assembly, it’s one step up from raw 1s and 0s. Just vaguely human readable abbreviations for given sets of 1s and 0s. There are no built in loops or if statements, you have to build all that shit yourself from scratch every time you want to use one. And there’s exactly one built in variable you can use called the register

          • Hypersapien@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Admittedly, the last time I touched real Assembly was 20 years ago.

            There’s a couple Zachtronics games, TIS-100 and Shenzhen I/O, both that use a limited form of Assembly, that are probably filling in the gaps in my memory.

          • Hector_McG@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            with the hell that is x86 assembly

            I soooo wish IBM had gone with the Motorola 68000 family instead of the Intel 8086 family of chips for the PC. It had a far, far nicer instruction set.

      • Troy@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Oh that’s so hardcore

        edit: looking at the git repo, it looks like it was a team of seven, and she was the lead. So it isn’t all her code. Still super impressive :)

        • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          The other big notable thing for assembly is that it isn’t portable. Assembly is very different for every processor architecture, unlike something like C where you may have to make some adjustments between an x86 vs ARM proc, in assembly you’re basically rewriting it from scratch

          • Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            Also, this is an obscure assembly variant specifically for the computers in the Apollo mission. Not sure about the specifications on that, maybe there is a handbook, but I doubt it.

            Rewriting the code to x86 or anything seems improbable since you’d pretty much have to guess what the instructions are actually doing.

    • Kinglink@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Assembly. Like most embedded systems (at least up until we had enough power to waste on higher languages)