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What was one of the first or earliest things that got you really excited about programming? How old were you at the time? If it's been a long time since that fateful event, what has kept you interested?

I remember doing writing really simple programs on my T1-99/4A when I was in 2nd grade. But what really kept me going was programming music and graphic applications on my Commodore 128.

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I, like I suspect most programmers of my age, started with BASIC on one of the home computers of the time (in my case mostly a BBC B at school; it was a few years before I had my own computer). In those days, of course, you couldn't avoid BASIC even if the only command you learnt was LOAD "" or the equivalent. Even people who weren't particularly technically minded tended to learn the basics of BASIC, and it's not surprising that those of us who were got hooked.

I have been worried for a while about where the next generation of programmers would come from. Modern PCs do everything they can to shield you from any opportunity to program, and if you do make the effort, the learning curve to make something worthwhile is quite steep. Yes, so long as it's seen as a good career you'll get people training as programmers but they won't be the best people - where would the people who start as kids and love it come from?

Reading this thread has been very interesting, because it has answered my question and re-assured me that there will be another generation of programmers, and most of them will probably start with web applications.

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1973 I started a CSE in Computer Studies. We had one hour of teletype modem connection to the local Education Authorities main frame.

We used to prepare punch tapes during every spare to then upload during our allotted hour. It was magical to create BASIC code to calculate average test marks, tally heights of class mates etc.

What really sold me was when visited the mainframe on a school trip.
It was like being on the Starship Enterprise!

My passion for all things computer related soarded. Went to Uni to learn how to build them - Electronics Degree.
Think it was my first Summer home a neighbour had bought a self assemble Sinclair Z80 kit.
We spent hours writing stuff for it, owning my own was only a pipe dream!

Now I'm continually haressed by my wife to get rid of some off them! :-)

What keeps me going?

The sense of magic and wonder that comes from turning a few(or not so few) keystrokes into a resulting action, whether be that be a remote actuator or the result of a calculation appearing on the screen. Even though I know how it all hangs together from the ground up it still memerises me.

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When I was 8, my farther created a basic program (for C64) with that I had to train mental calculations. It did not take long time for me to find out, how to print out the result of the exercises too.

Until now I am really bad at doing mental arithmetic. But who cares...

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I wanted to play video games. It was pretty much all I wanted to do when I was younger.

I knew that my parents would not just buy me a computer to play games so I needed a hook. I convinced them to buy it by telling them that I would learn how to program. Little did I know they would hold me to it.

Once I got in it I found it fit with my natural fascination of trying to figure out how things worked and I was hooked.

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Typing in games on a ZX81 with no tape drive (so I had to type them in lots). Eventually I started wondering what I was typing in...

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My father worked for IBM most of his career so I had access to computers early on. I got into programming with BASIC back in the DOS 3.2 days and then my parents bought me the Borland Turbo C++ compiler and a book and I was off and running. I think my 12th birthday present was the Borland C++ compiler for Windows (It came on 20+ floppy disks I think).

The Internet was my downfall, though. I got a modem and a Compuserve account when I was in my early teens and that was it for programming for a long time. :P

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I loved to play Wing Commander, but my installation discs were 5 1/4''. I used TurboPascal to write my own setup.exe that was able to install from 3 1/2 '' discs.

I must have been 17 or 18 back then, long long ago...

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I bought a magazine with a basic program to type in for my Texas Instruments TI99/4A. It didn't work. I re-typed it, it didn't work again. I got my brother to read out line after line, no mistakes in typing, it still didn't work. It took me 5 days to debug it, but the seed was sown!

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In Grade 7 (1981) we had one TRS 80 in the science room. Every Friday we had a two hour activity session -- Things like electrical shop (Building motors in Metal Shop), Anthropology (Noted documentarian showing off his stuff), extra sports, cooking, gaming, etc.

One of the options was something called "Math Digressions" Which was about the nerdiest title ever. It consisted of us writing programs on the TRS 80.

The one nice thing about that flavour of BASIC was the set command. You could set a pixel directly via screen co-ordinates (set(0,0) would turn on the upper left) which was very easy for a 12 year old to understand. The character space mapping that commodore used was too complex at that age.

I started spending my time after school at the local Radio Shack. I'd come in with programs I had written out on paper and type them in. I had a working blackjack game by the end of grade 8. The Shack guys didn't seem to mind. I think it was corporate policy to let the kids in as long as they didn't act up; It allowed them to show the scared adults that even a child could do it.

It wasn't until grade 10 that I was again allowed to take a programming course in school. We started off in HYPO (an 8 bit assembly simulator), then Waterloo Basic, which was a fairly structured basic flavour, and the school had a policy "GOTO = fail", which actually instilled some good practices.

In grade 11 we moved on to PASCAL and C, which I hated at the time. (too many hard to find characters!).

In University (at various times), I ended up studying Fortran, C++ and Java.

I'll echo what wcm said. It was a magical time. And I think that people my age (35-50) are the most computer literate generation there will ever be (as a whole -- you'll always find gifted individuals). We learned when computers were becoming ubiquitous, but still hard to use. We had to conquer the dos prompt. We had to try multiple interrupt jumper configurations on our modems to get them to work. We actually had to understand this stuff.

I teach part time a 2nd year Data Structures using Java. I still get chills at the coolness of a recursive binary search tree, or a queue based breadth first search. Kids today just don't give a damn about this stuff. They want instant messaging.

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A friend of a friend of mine made a simple PGP page with a primitive shoutbox on it long time ago, and at that time I didn't even know there's something else than HTML for webpages. Do I need to say that my first webpage used images made with Paint?... and in BMP format.

And I was like "wow so cooool" so I started learning PHP (at that time I only knew writeln and readln in Pascal) and shortly I needed some database so I learned MySQL as that was mostly used back then.

Next I got intereted in C/C++. At school we were learning Pascal but at home I was learning and reading books about C/C++ and also I had my exams in C while everybody else in Pascal. Then some more PHP which got me to learn JavaScript and CSS too.

And as me always being curious for something new I started with Python, then some Java and after that some C# and who know what will get my interest in future...

Basically if and when I wanted to do something I tried to do it myself. I didn't ask anybody else to do it for me. If I didn't know how I learned, I googled, asked forums, mailing lists, etc...

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My uncle had a ZX81 when I was about nine years old. I think he had a four stroke engine display and a flight simulator, with only a horizon! Then he showed me a little game he had written to smash two block graphic steam engines together. I was hooked! I begged and begged until my parents dolled out £80 the year after and I got my very own ZX81. The rest is history...

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Two words: Apple Basic

My childhood friend and I were always hacking away little Apple Basic programs at his house. Then I took Adventures in Supercomputing in high school, which pretty much sealed the deal. We learned to work with UNIX, had a tour of a super computing facilty in Boulder, CO (they had a total storage capacity for the entire center of 2TB - which included all the disk and tape storage of a huge data center), I actually was sitting at lobo.psd.k12.co.us when it crashed and fell silent to the world forever :-( (no, I didn't do it)...

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When I was about ten years old, my father, who worked for IBM, took me to an open-house event at his office. Tucked away in one room was a guy who let people play a "Lunar Lander" game on a terminal.

The game was text-only. It just kept telling you your current altitude and velocity, and then asked you how many pounds of fuel you wanted to burn for the next ten seconds. If you ran out of fuel or hit the ground at too high a speed, you died.

It hooked me. It was something about the fact that there was this abstract model of a small feature of the universe inside the machine that got me excited. I wanted to build my own little universes.

The Scott Adams and Infocom text adventures where great motivators too. It all went downhill when they started adding pictures.

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A good friend got a TRS-80 when I was in 7th grade. He loaned me the user manual and I started to read up on BASIC. I started to give him had-written code for him to bring home and type in, so I got my first experience with remote debugging. I was trying to create a D&D character creator, IIRC.

A few months later we were at Sears, and I saw the computer display. I started writing a little program on the VIC 20 just to pass the time, and it amazed my parents and the salesman. Dad picked it up a week later, and the die was cast.

All,the VIC-20 -- how I loved that little beast. 5K of memory that could be persisted to a cassette tape drive -- and it took 30 minutes to write that much. Of the 5k, 1.2k was taken up by the BASIC operating system. That left me with 3.8K to code with, and now I doubt I've written an email that takes up less space. Ahh, the memories.

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I learned how to program on a Honeywell 6000 mainframe when I was in high school. It was owned by the school district for doing payroll and other administrative things. If they weren't busy, they would let us load our stacks of Hollerith cards. We learned Basic and Fortran and RPG4.

It was the late 70's and we thought we were just the most sophisticated kids in the world. It was a magical time...

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I got a Commodore 64 for my tenth birthday in the early 80s, followed by a BBC B a year later, and that was it - especially when I got the Beeb; as a commenter said above, it was tied in with the schools in the UK. The Beeb possessed a good BASIC language, and a built in assember; you could embed assembly easily into your BASIC program.

That machine taught me lots. The first time I realised I could write graphical images using assembler and it worked about 3 million times quicker than my BASIC loop was a bug moment.

Edit: That should be "big" moment, but the freudian slip is too good to correct. LMAO

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LOGO!

And perhaps on a more honest note, it gave me a lot of bragging rights :)

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Seeing a friend typing magazine listings into his ZX81 (probably around 1982). Santa brought me a Dragon 32 for christmas that year....happy days!

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When I was 7 my brother taught me a few commands in basic. I was amazed. So I started reading up on it and started to write simple multiple choice quiz games, such as who was the first prime minister of canada, a, b, c, etc. Then the interest just grew from there.

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Apple II games.

And first programming language: Basic. First "big" program, a dig dug clone :)

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The book The Blind Watchmaker by Richard Dawkins. Dawkins (the evolutionary biologist responsible for The Selfish Gene) wrote a very cool computer program that illustrates how evolution works. From reading the book I got the idea to apply the same approach to music composition, and I've been a programmer ever since.

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My father was a programmer going back to the early 1960's and always pushed me toward the field. For a Boy Scout computers merit badge, we read together a simple tutorial on Fortran (it was in a 4"x6" binder, with lots of cartoons and simple explanations -- I was probably about 11 at the time)

A few years later (Aug 1977 -- I was 14), one of the very first personal computer trade shows was being held in Atlantic City (just a few hours drive from our home in Northern NJ). Dad convinced mom it would be a cool weekend vacation, so while mom and my sister went to the beach, dad & I saw the first-hand actual computers that you could own and keep in your house: the Apple II, the Radio Shack TRS-80 (later known as the "Model I"), and the HeathKit which was very cool (and disappeared very quickly....)

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I was going to Texas for Electrical Engineering, and took Turbo Pascal, and found I love coding. So I caught the bug from there.

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creating a level pack for nibbles in QBasic

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TRS-80 Color Computer II, my sister had one, and I used to sneak into her room and play with it. Since she wasn't into it, she had no ROMs or anything, so I had to look through the book to make it do anything. I would type programs in by hand from the samples in the book (several pages of code at a time) and then I would sit there and modify them and see what happened. Finally things started to 'click' and I realized I could make new programs and make different things happen on my own.

All this was usually in an hour or so when I was alone before catching the school bus (I was approx 6 or 7 at the time). I would lose everything every time I left, because I wasn't supposed to be using her stuff and she would have beat me up for it. (Having a sister 8 years older than you can be tough!)

From there, I always did my best to be around a computer writing some kind of code...

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Programming at personal Peril! You win the thread. – chris Sep 29 '08 at 15:03
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GWBasic aka GOTO!

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Just trying to make boring repetitive tasks quicker.

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I was thrown in at the deep end while doing another job. The scheduling tools we used for managing consultants' time was hopeless, and I knew I could do a better job. So I taught myself PHP and mySQL.

I've improved a lot since then.

Hopefully. ;)

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Playing with BASIC on an old XT8086. Because getting it to do something interesting was easier than getting out of the BASIC interpreter at the time. (The magic exit-word was SYSTEM.)

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Science Fair project on Commodore 64 magnetic disk and tape media

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