Comment by YZF
17 days ago
They optimized for different things. The instant responsiveness of the 3270 vs. the VT at Xbps for local editing was nice. You could do async updates and even async input (via polling) as well though there was this annoying thing where the input could clash with the output and you'd get this weird icon that you had to clear (my brain is iffy on the details) e.g. when you hit a PF key while the display is updating. I think there was some workaround. I wrote some games that ran on the 3279 in an async mode (using some utilities a friend of mine built for that).
My finest work on the 3270 was an analog clock screensaver.
It was simultaneously the hardest and most pointless thing I have ever written.
Our interface to the mainframe was CMS/VSE on Z-OS. We never touched Z-OS and I was a little afraid to try, but on CMS there was REXX installed as a scripting language and I built an immediate mode character update library for it, mainly so I could sort of treat it like a VT instead of abusing the text editor(XEDIT if I remember correctly) as a ui toolkit like every other script there did, I never did figure out async keyboard reads, so probably had to poll like you said) and promptly did the first thing you do when you have access to an immediate mode text screen in the early 2000's, made a matrix screen saver. (no games because of the lack of async keyboard reads, so screen savers it was)
Anyhow the hard part, CMS REXX had no trig library, how was I going to do the hands on my analog clock without a trig library? So I smuggled in some printouts from the nist algorithm database(what an amazing website) on how to calculate sin, only to discover that REXX also had no exponent function, so the next night I smuggled in some printouts of how to calculate that. and some days later was the proud owner of an analog clock screen saver and perhaps the slowest most inefficient exponential and trig libraries to be found on CMS/REXX
I wish I could have saved the source, but... it was on a mainframe and really, I was just there to shuffle the tapes around, when my boss tried to warn me off of writing scripts I convinced him it was to help make our tape duties more productive, and for the most part it was.