#redirect [[Real Programmers Don't Use Pascal]]
The term '''Real Programmer''' is used in [[computer programming|computer programmer]]s' [[folklore]] to describe the archetypical "hardcore" programmer. A ''Real Programmer'' eschews modern or graphical tools such as [[integrated development environment]]s or languages other than [[assembly language]] or [[machine code]] in favour of more direct and efficient solutions – [[low-level programming language|closer to the hardware]].
The term is often used to describe a more bare-metal way of doing something – for example: "Real Programmers don't use [[integrated development environment|IDEs]], they write programs using <code>cat > [[a.out]]</code>" (that is, they write machine-readable binary files from beginning to end without making any mistakes). Each generation tends to slightly redefine a Real Programmer, as coding techniques change. For instance, a young [[Java (programming language)|Java]] programmer might refer to an older [[C (programming language)|C]] programmer as being a Real Programmer. In turn, these C programmers refer to older [[Assembly_language#Assembler|Assembler]] programmers in the same way.
The archetypal Real Programmer is [[Mel Kaye]] of the [[Royal McBee]] Computer Corporation who is immortalised in "The Story of Mel"<ref>[http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/mel.html The story of Mel]</ref>, one of the most famous pieces of hacker folklore. As the story infamously puts it, "He wrote in machine code – in 'raw, unadorned, inscrutable [[hexadecimal]] numbers. Directly."'
==Modernisation of the real programmer==
Over the years, the figure of the 'real programmer' was taken up and adapted as new and more powerful programming languages were created. If actually the real programmer of the eighties "does all in [[FORTRAN]]" instead of [[Pascal (linguaggio)|Pascal]], one of the nineties "does all in [[C (programming language)|C]] rather than [[C++]] or [[Java (linguaggio)|Java]], or" does everything in [[Perl]] "rather than [[Python]] or [[Ruby]].
==See also==
* ''[[Real Programmers Don't Use Pascal]]'', a 1983 parody of ''[[Real Men Don't Eat Quiche]]'' exploring the psychology of, and prospects for, the Real Programmer.
==References==
<references/>
==External links==
*[http://www.multicians.org/thvv/realprogs.html "Real Programmers Don't Write Specs": A list of 'Real programmers...' assertions]
[[Category:Computer jargon]]
[[Category:Computer folklore]]
[[it:Vero programmatore]]
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