News

Micro Focus Net Express Bridges COBOL and .NET

The venerable COBOL programming language still powers reams of mainframe-level applications, posing a challenge for development managers seeking a way to bridge the chasm between legacy applications and active .NET projects.

The venerable COBOL programming language still powers reams of mainframe-level applications, posing a challenge for development managers seeking a way to bridge the chasm between legacy applications and active .NET projects.

Net Express 5.0 from Micro Focus (http://www.microfocus.com) offers a bridge between the two worlds. It allows developers to reuse COBOL code within the .NET framework, instead of having to rewrite it from scratch. In many instances, businesses may want to layer a graphical interface over proven, COBOL-based business logic. Under Net Express 5.0, Visual Studio 2005 can then be used to develop and extend the legacy code.

"It takes COBOL programmers into a new environment. If you suddenly give a COBOL programmer a Java IDE or Visual Studio, that's quite a big leap," says John Billman, product manager for Micro Focus. "It provides a common environment for the deployment of COBOL and other Microsoft language-based applications. It's the same development environment across languages of the .NET framework."

About half of all organizations are still writing new COBOL code and about 15 percent of new programs are being developed with it, according to the company.

"There are still huge amounts of COBOL today. It's running well. It's doing what it's designed to do-banks, pensions, insurance and so forth," Billman notes.

Billman says it's important to keep the language relevant because of the people who make it tick: "I would say the more important factor is the fact that they've got millions of lines of COBOL inside the organization. [For] those programmers, it's not simply that they are experts in COBOL the language: it's that they understand the business functions inside the code of the language."

The current release is targeted for Visual Studio 2005 and .NET 2.0, but the company expects the solution to run under .NET 3.0 as well. Pricing varies by deployment. The product ships with the Visual Studio 2005 Standard Edition package, but is compatible with higher-end editions of Microsoft's flagship IDE.
comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Microsoft Highlights Visual Studio Live! Event Lineup and Longtime Developer Community Role

    A Microsoft MVP Blog post on Visual Studio Live!'s longevity arrives as the 2026 conference series continues with upcoming stops at Microsoft HQ, San Diego and Orlando.

  • Using Local AI to Cut Copilot Usage-Based Billing Shock

    After being gobsmacked by the new billing plan using almost all my monthly credits in one or two days, I tried pushing some Copilot-style coding work onto local models in VS Code. What I found was less "free AI" and more "pick your pain": cloud charges on one side, heavy local resource use and long waits on the other.

  • .NET 11 Preview 5 Focuses on Performance, Productivity and Safer Code

    .NET 11 Preview 5 focuses on under-the-hood runtime performance gains, streamlined APIs and language features that reduce boilerplate, plus built‑in security checks and incremental ASP.NET Core and EF Core improvements aimed at everyday developer productivity.

  • VS Code 1.124 Focuses on Agent Autonomy and Parallel Sessions

    Microsoft's June 2026 VS Code update turns on Autopilot by default and adds background sending for agent sessions.

Subscribe on YouTube