That's extremely familiar. Although somewhat tangential to the courses I was doing, it was (in late 60s) deemed to be a good idea to 'teach us some computing', so we had a 'practical class' for a couple of hours once per week. We would slave away trying to write FORTRAN code on 'coding forms', which were then handed to people who punched our code onto cards, and then shipped them a mile or so down the road to 'the university computer'. Come next week's class, our coding forms would come back, complete with the corresponding compiler output (rarely got beyond that stage!) - which almost invariably said something along the lines of "Syntax Error in Line 7". By that process, it took most of us a whole term to write and debug a few dozen lines of code which would actually run and do roughly what we had intended!... but can't help butting in with recollections of writing punched cards (1960s for IBM). Awful; one mistake and two days later the whole lot came back without any explanation. This could happen several weeks running for the same analysis.
Kind Regards, John
