Maybe
that's changed today. I remember seeing a figure of 11
debugged lines of code per day per programmer as the average for a
GSA programmer back in the 1980s.
I remeber that statistic from my youth, too.
What kind of code?
Fortran? APL? Cobol? Assember? C?
I think the language is less important than what the code is doing.
I can scribble out hundreds of lines a day when it's boilerplate or
just a mechanical transcription of a well-burnt-in algorithm, but can
easily drop down to the single-digit range when I'm struggling with a
difficult problem. Nor do I have any reason to think I'm unusual in
any respect here.
Indeed, what is my lines-per-day figure when I spend all day struggling
with a bug and end up fixing it by replacing four lines by two? Minus
two lines per day?
Note that the preceding paragraphs are entirely independent of what
language I am (putatively) writing in.
/~\ The ASCII Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTML mouse at
rodents-montreal.org
/ \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B