• @[email protected]
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    126 days ago

    All programs can be written with on less line of code. All programs have at least one bug.

    The humble “Hello world” would like a word.

    • @[email protected]
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      216 days ago

      Just to boast my old timer credentials.

      There is an utility program in IBM’s mainframe operating system, z/OS, that has been there since the 60s.

      It has just one assembly code instruction: a BR 14, which means basically ‘return’.

      The first version was bugged and IBM had to issue a PTF (patch) to fix it.

      • @[email protected]
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        95 days ago

        Okay, you can’t just drop that bombshell without elaborating. What sort of bug could exist in a program which contains a single return instruction?!?

        • @[email protected]
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          25 days ago

          It didn’t clear the return code. In mainframe jobs, successful executions are expected to return zero (in the machine R15 register).

          So in this case fixing the bug required to add an instruction instead of removing one.

      • Rose
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        35 days ago

        Reminds me of how in some old Unix system, /bin/true was a shell script.

        …well, if it needs to just be a program that returns 0, that’s a reasonable thing to do. An empty shell script returns 0.

        Of course, since this was an old proprietary Unix system, the shell script had a giant header comment that said this is proprietary information and if you disclose this the lawyers will come at ya like a ton of bricks. …never mind that this was a program that literally does nothing.

    • @[email protected]
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      96 days ago

      You can fit an awful lot of Perl into one line too if you minimize it. It’ll be completely unreadable to most anyone, but it’ll run

      • Schadrach
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        25 days ago

        Qrpff says hello. Or, rather, decrypts DVD movies in 472 bytes of code, 531 if you want the fast version that can do it in real time. The Wikipedia article on it includes the full source code of both.

        https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Qrpff