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When you first started to write program, what was the first programming language you learned?

Please don't post repeats. If someone already posted it, just vote for it.

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I could swear this same "poll" has been run 2-3 times before. And subsequently deleted for being utterly pointless. – Shog9 Oct 6 '08 at 23:19
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Ok, it's not just me. This is a "bad penny" post -- keeps coming back. – harpo Oct 6 '08 at 23:21
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Tagging it offtopic, just so it can at least be filtered out from serious programming questions. That's all that needs to be done, really. – Chris Charabaruk Oct 6 '08 at 23:27
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Ultimately if you don't like these kinds of questions, then don't comment/answer or vote them. Otherwise you are supporting them. And, as long as there is support for them, people will keep posting them. period. – Chris Pietschmann Oct 7 '08 at 1:05
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The problem is overzealously closing such questions. As you type in the title of your question, SO helpfully pumps out a handful of "related" questions. So, guess what happens if your "First programming language" doesn't immediately show a previous "First programming language" question? – pookleblinky Oct 7 '08 at 1:30
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156 Answers

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6502 assembly

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VAX 11 BASIC

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BASIC on the Dragon 32. Obscure!

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IBM 1620 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_1620 machine code

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BASIC on an Apple IIe.

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Scheme.

(It should be possible to give one word answers)

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Fortran IV, IBM 370.

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TI-BASIC on a TI-82.

I remember when I first figured out how an If statement worked, it was a great moment. After that discovery, I read the manual front to back and worked my way up to writing my own apps and games - fun times.

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QBASIC. Ah, old days...

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RPL on HP-48S

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Early hobby: PHP, First "learned" language: Standard ML

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Bash

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Borland C and Turbo C

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GW-BASIC -> Amiga BASIC -> Aztec C -> Fortran 77 ............

........ Ruby :)

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Logo on an Apple ][

My perception of the universe shifted about 45 degrees when I realized a function could call itself...

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VB6 What a barrel of laffs that was ;)

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BBC Basic - on an Acorn Electron, bless

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SNOBOL, in a computational linguistics class. The first real assignment was an English-to-Pig-Latin translator; it took about five lines of code. I've been a fan of languages with dynamic typing, garbage collection, and rich control structures ever since.

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BASIC on Atari 800XL

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GFA Basic on an Atari 520.

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BASIC on a TI-99 4a

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PDP-11 Macro Assembler

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TI-BASIC on a TI 99/4A

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TI99/4A TI-Basic

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Z80 Assembly, on a 64K TSR80 with a cassette tape drive.

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You never forget your first: PL/1. Not counting stuff from school.

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mIRC Script -- actually quite useful

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Assembler on CDC 6600 Mainframe followed closely by CDC advanced Fortran IV.

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QBasic.

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1802 machine code (1's and 0's) ;-p

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