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Troll Technology (QT) Releases Scripting Language

OopChugALug writes "Troll Tech last night released a beta of QSA, which stands for QT Scripting Language for Applications. Download here. As a business apps developer for a major financial institution's trading floor, I know the traders will love this. Hopefully, with QSA, I can get rid of Excel, and give the traders Spreadsheet widgets, with the flexibility of a 'VBA-like' scriptability to boot!"

6 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. When hell freezes over, pigs fly, et cetera. by cyberkreiger · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hopefully, with QSA, I can get rid of Excel, and give the traders Spreadsheet widgets, with the flexibility of a 'VBA-like' scriptability to boot!"


    Yes, yes, very likely!
    --
    Stumbling in the dark
    I hear slavering of jaws
    Eaten by a grue.
  2. Hopefully by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'Lug, you aren't going to roll something out to your Trading Desk with "no support and no warranty"?

    Are you?

    --

    Operator, give me the number for 911!
    1. Re:Hopefully by JabberWokky · · Score: 4, Funny
      I worked for a revenue stream purchaser (the kind of people who buy lottery streams, etc). The guy who calculated everything had an Excel spreadsheet he used for it all - billions of dollars of streams. He knew about Excels quirks and bugs and he did the major calculations twice using different formula and methods to arrive at the answers. I once asked him what he did when they didn't match - and they often didn't. "Choose the one that benefits us the most" was his reply.

      No wonder why they use Excel. :)

      --
      Evan "Thinks Word 97 is the best WP to date, but not a fan of Excel"

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    2. Re:Hopefully by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 4, Informative

      Trading support software is developed in-house at *all* of the investment banks (i.e. Supported in house, no warranty).

      Um..I work with a trading desk every day. Some of it is in-house, much of it isn't. There's a huge list of vendors that supply trading desk applications. Many of them sell software with Excel plugin capability. Bloomberg and Bridge come to mind. And you're right, why in the world would you switch away from Excel.

      Regardless of all that, if one of our developers downloaded an obscure scripting language with no support and started rolling out custom applications I'm pretty sure we'd escort him to the door on the spot. Things like compliance, due diligence, split second transaction accountability, Business Recovery, transparency, etc all mean you can't just toss out whatever widgets you like. Can you imagine rolling out trade balancing tools to a trading desk writting in unsupported language 'Foo', and then putting in your 2 week notice?

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
  3. Re:just what we need by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's based on ECMAscript, so it's not really learning a whole other language. This was smart on TrollTech's part - no one's interested in learning a whole other language just to interface with pretty widgets. This'll make it very accessible to a lot of developers.

    Should open up some interesting possibilities for KDE, too.

    --

    This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

  4. Troll Technology by Hubert_Shrump · · Score: 5, Funny

    Troll(/.) {
    case FP:
    ? FP[Rnd]
    case Soviet:
    reverse(HeadLine)
    ? "in soviet russia, $1 $2es you!"
    case Ascii:
    for (!filtered)
    ? Rand_Art
    case ReadArticle:
    restate(wrongly+inflammatoryDeclaration)
    case !ReadArticle:
    restate(wrongly+inflammatoryDeclaration)
    case Beo:
    ? "imagine a beowulf cluster of $1"
    case AYB:
    ? "All your $1 are belong to $2"

    --
    Keep your packets off my GNU/Girlfriend!