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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 maintained you interest - or what new things strengthened your interest?

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 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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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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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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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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There were 3 TRS-80 in my physic class at secondary school. I got hooked and spent most of my lunch time playing with BASIC. I even skipped some courses to spend my time at the computer ;)

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When I was 11 we went on a family holiday and my Dad took a copy of K&R that he'd just bought; naturally I read it from cover to cover before he had a chance to pick it up. It was a few years before we got a computer I could use C on.

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I started out in college in electrical engineering wanting to build computer hardware. I switched to software development after a year when I realized the only course I had enjoyed the was the intro to programming course they made me take.

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My life may have taken a very different track if there wasn't a programming manual included with the Commodore 64.

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An employer that didn't know I was there, a UNIX box, a net connection, and more than enough time to waste....

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An employer of mine used WordPerfect macros to automate a lot of the work we did. I started programming by improving a lot of the macros that were already written. Then I started writing new macros.

Eventually I started learning Python and a little PHP as well.

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In school I used to program my TI-83 to solve problems on my Math/Physics tests. It worked out so well I thought I would just do it for real.

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My really first progamming experiences were using the formulas and VBS inside Excel. A Year after that I started an apprenticeship in software developing... I was 16 or 17 Years old.

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In school a bunch of us played around with electronics. We first built FM transmitters, synthesizers, and amplifiers with analog components, and then started using CMOS digital gates. One day a friend (who is now working for Apple) showed me a series of articles in an electronics magazine that showed how one could program a computer in Basic. We didn't have access to a computer, so we started writing programs on paper, which we swapped and discussed how we solved particular problems. We then found a Tandy dealer who would rent us a TRS-80 by the hour. Needless to say, I immediately discovered that I had taken huge liberties with the syntax of Basic on those programs written on paper. Over the summer we worked for the Texas Instruments home computer distributor so we could use those marvelous computers as much as we wanted. We got hooked for life.

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Boredom at school aged 9 or 10, lots of free time, and the availability of BBC Micros combined with an irritating lack of games. Making text adventures was also way more fun than writing short stories.

Also, being able to make something (even if it's virtual) is particularly appealing if you are hopeless at drawing and already chopped the end of your finger off in carpentry class. I think that's still what keeps me interested.

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TI-86 when i was in 8th grade. Probably the only language I've ever learned where GOTO was acceptable.

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Coding Quake mods. Seriously, the first time I saw C was in the form of QuakeC. From there I moved onto "real" C when the actual source code was released.

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Logo!!!

I had maybe 8 years or so. My father had started a software company, and we had a computer at home, where I usually played Digger, Pacman or some game like that. Then I started with Logo, and quickly got fascinated with that.

Later I just watched my father program (it was Turbo Pascal, IIRC) and started asking questions. Got my first Pascal programs to have a menu when starting the computer to ask a password and later launch games.

I started working with my father, developing in C++, when I had 15 or so. 12 years ago.

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If I told the truth, nobody would believe me. But I'll try anyway.

Back in the mid 1960s, I was about 3 years old. My adoptive mother worked swing shift at some firm that had one of those big newfangled "computer" things. They got all the modern equipment. Hard drives and, get this, TELETYPEWRITERS - they didn't want those "old" (ASR-33) teletypes. Anyway, she used to take me to work with her at night. I'd get to watch the terminals a bit and I found them fascinating. When I got tired, I'd curl up in a sleeping bag in a room nearby. I have no idea when she'd bring us home but I always got up for school the next day.

One day I asked her how old she'd be when I turned 18. She refused to tell me but showed me how to "figure it out". They had a new BASIC interpreter on their system and she coached me through writing a program to figure it out. (A whole 3 line if I remember correctly). This isn't as weird as it sounds when you consider that she'd already taught me to type by drawing the numbers and letters on my fingers (so I could theoretically practice without a typewriter - which was not always around).

Pretty much from that time forward, I was a technophile. By the time I got to middle school and high school, I knew I wanted that for my career and finally got to get my hands on some computers more often. Whether it was the old PDP-8 at school or a more advanced PDP-11/70 running BASIC+2 at my mother's office, I eagerly took any time I could to poke, play and learn.

I keyed in programs from 101 BASIC Computer Games and countless issues of Creative Computing (some of which I still have) whenever I had 'spare time' from doing data entry work on weekends.

Discovered I had a knack for programming and it's been my vocation in addition to my hobby ever since.

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Wiring boards on an IBM 403.

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Begged my parents for an Atari 800, c.1979, with an Atari BASIC cartridge and tape storage device. Whoppin' 48K RAM.

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Like many, I got started with BASIC, trying to re-write this awesome text-based RPG called "Castle" that I played constantly.

But the thing that got me really interested in programming was a game called Omega -- it was an awesome tank battle game where instead of controlling the tank at runtime, you wrote the AI code that controlled the tank and then watched it do battle. Logging into the game was a simulation of logging into the network of some faux-secret-government-agency thing, there was the tank design mode where you selected armor, weapons, and accessories, but the clutch piece (and the vast majority of game play) was the coding: it was in a proprietary language much like BASIC, with commands like "scan", "turn", "fire", etc. The manual for the game was basically an API reference.

I loved this game and had no idea how much I was learning at the time. It hit a sweet spot--I wish I could generate that level of motivation in my work projects nowadays!

If anyone else played this game, or knows of any (much) more recent games that involve programming simple faux-AI things, I'd love to know. It might breathe some new life into my programming life!

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Writing BASIC on the commodore64 then a large time off of computers altogether coupled with a teacher strike occuring the day of filling out an application to teacher's college and a friend with a school calendar with a computer programming section!

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Well, this will mark me as an "old guy", but I got hooked on computers when I was a kid when I read "Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine" by Jay Williams.

Here's the synopsis from the Wikipedia:

Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new neighbor, Irene Miller, Danny has some success with the machine before it is sabotaged. Danny figures out what is wrong with the machine and corrects the problem.

Then a couple of years later, I got to play with a primative line graphics micro computer and played some text based "moonlander" (I crashed a lot).

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inspiration: watching Mr. Spock do amazing things with a computer on the old Star Trek series

start: at age 13, my school was given a Data General Nova 2 minicomputer, and all students had to get a Programming in BASIC textbook. The math teacher was supposed to teach programming, but we had a substitute for the year that didn't know how - so a few of us just read the book and learned on our own.

did you know that 2 instances of a mulit-terminal Monopoly game polling for moves in shared files without a wait-state can cause the whole system to crash? We didn't know either... ;-)

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Hypercard

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In sixth grade, i was a total math and electronics geek, and my parents and teachers were always trying to think of things that would interest me. One day i was given a personal tour of the Oakland County school system's headquarters computing department. They had a mainframe of some kind, with magnetic core memory that you could see through glass windows in large cabinets, teletype machines, etc.

One guy showed me the process of writing, compiling and running short FORTRAN programs. (It was all capitals in those days) I asked if he could compute logarithms of numbers - something i was curious about at the time, bent on finding out what the magic was behind printing those tables of logarithms. He wrote a short program, ran it, and it printed a few values. Studying the printout later, i was disappointed to find the program merely called a LOG subroutine, a complete black box hiding the magic. I was really determined for the next few years to learn how computers calculated logs, square roots, trig functions and all that. Maybe that incident is also why i strongly prefer open source.

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My brother got a ZX Spectrum for Christmas. I liked to play with programming creating such masterpieces as Etch-a-Sketch. First paid programming was a utility to generate BASIC programs with data statements that allowed assembly language programs to be published in magazines. Got that published in Amstrad Action when I was 12. (If anyone has a copy of the magazine it appeared in, please let me know via my web site contact form!)

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My older brother gave me an HTML book when I was 9 and I learned HTML. Then at a "technology camp" (which wasn't really "camp") when I was 10 I learned QBASIC. And for the next few years I spent hours a day (or night) learning and programming in QBASIC on my computer, until I finally started learning other languages.

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Got interested in programming since grade 6 when I get my first AMD 166MHZ 32MB 8GB computer and played first computer game using it; wanted to be a game programmer ever since. But I turned out to be a business application developer =\

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My school counter-strike server needed to be L-3-3-T, so I made a website for its Message of the Day welcome. Cutting and pasting HTML got me what I wanted quickly, and I was always looking to make the HTML more perfect through semantics and xhtml etc.

My second website used PHP and similarly I loved the early wonders and continually improving.

I was 17 and considered I'd be step behind against people who start at age 10, but that didn't matter because I enjoyed it.

I got a PHP job after school, and later changed my University course to CompSci, where I'll be starting in 2 weeks!

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