On Mar 10, 10:26 am, Roel Schroeven <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> rockingred schreef:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Mar 8, 8:27 pm, Dan Bishop <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> //    Copyright (C) 2008 Foobar Computer Consulting
> >> //
> >> //    VERSION   PROJECT#     DATE     DESCRIPTION
> >> //    -------   --------   --------   ------------------
> >> //      1.00     123456    01/04/08   Original creation.
> >> //
>
> >> Eleven lines, of which the only useful information to me was the
> >> project number, as knowing this let me look up who was behind these
> >> comments.
>
> > Actually, "editorial" comments that tell you who last changed a
> > program, when and why can be useful.  I worked in a company with a
> > number of programmers on staff.  Having comments that told us Joe
> > worked on a program yesterday that isn't working today could often
> > solve half the battle.  Especially if Joe also added a comment near
> > the lines he had changed.  Likewise including the "Project#" would
> > help us track all the programs that had to be changed for a specific
> > project.  This allowed us to move all related items into the Live
> > system once the testing phase had been completed (we just searched for
> > everything with the same Project# in it).  Yes, on rare occasions we
> > would have an entire page of "Editorial" comments to ignore at the
> > beginning of our program listing, but it was easy enough to skip that
> > page.  I will grant you that probably after 10 changes the first
> > change isn't as important anymore (unless you want to backtrack and
> > find out who started the Project in the first place and what it's
> > original purpose was).
>
> That is certainly useful, but IMO that's what version control systems
> are for.
>
> --
> The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge
> faster than society gathers wisdom.
>    -- Isaac Asimov
>
> Roel Schroeven- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Unfortunatly, in many of the companies I worked for, version control
software was not implemented.  In some cases, where it was, it
actually inserted the comments into the header of the program as
described.  In others, the software was so limited as to make it
useless.
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