ALSO CALLED: JCL DEFINITION: JCL (job control language) is a language for describing jobs (units of work) to the MVS, OS/390, and VSEoperating systems, which run on IBM's S/390 large server (mainframe) computers. These operating
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VIDEOCAST:
In this Videocast, filmed at The ServerSide Java Symposium 2008 in Las Vegas, Java expert Ted Neward gives the conference keynote "Why the Next Five Years Will Be About Languages" discussing the current and future state of programming languages.
PODCAST:
Learn the trends and evolution of an intuitive graphical programming language designed to remove time consuming programming tasks. Develop applications more efficiently and achieve reliable, real-time performance on multi-core processors.
JOB CONTROL LANGUAGE DEFINITION (continued): systems allocate their time and space resources among the total number of jobs that have been started in the computer. Jobs in turn break down into job steps. All the statements required to run a particular program constitute a job step. Jobs are background (sometimes called batch) units of work that run without requiring user interaction (for example, print jobs). In addition, the operating system manages interactive (foreground) user requests that initiate units Job Control Language definition sponsored by SearchDataCenter.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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