vote up 5 vote down star
2

Why did you get into programming, and how old were you? It'd certainly be interesting to see the reasons for a large sample of programmers.

flag
show 1 more comment

41 Answers

1 2 next
vote up 0 vote down

I first started when I was 6. I was at a science club type thing (yeah, yeah, I was a nerd even then), and we were taking apart computers to see how they were made. After that, we were shown a computer with a cool picture on it. It was the Mandelbrot fractal, and the teacher-type-person said that if anyone wants to know how to make one for ourself, we should take this handout.

In the handout, there was this 3k line QBASIC program, along with an explaination of how to run it, how to alter it, etc. When I got home, it took me a day to type it in; and it took something like 7 minutes to render on a 640x480 resolution. I then started to play around with it, and was hooked.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I got started making custom ZZT levels with friends when I was in the 4th grade.

Yep.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I didn't have a clue of what to study, and my then girlfriend decided for "Informatics" ( very similar to SE ) and so did I ( wanting to spend more time with her )

So at age of 18 a saw my first source code. It was pascal.

I'm 30 now and not regrets at all!!.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

My friend dug up QBASIC on his computer when we were about 14, and he taught me the commands INPUT, IF...THEN...ELSE and GOTO (that being all he knew). I loved the idea of making things work, so I played around with it a bit, teaching myself from the help file.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I got started with a math book and my trusty TI-82 that the teacher had lent all of us for the year. Naturally, being in the 8th grade at the time, it didn't take me long to discover the "GetKey" command and program my first version of Pong, completely from scratch, which crashed at 204 score every time due to a memleak. By the end of that year, I had a full blown BASIC simulation of a pokemon battle going, and it just kind of grew from there.

My first experience with programming on a PC actually came with Visual Basic 6.0. I took up the language myself (small school, no Programming teacher) and went to compete in BPA, where I then proceeded to make it to Nationals competition 3 years during high school. At this point, I was programming in basically all of my free time, and in time (during my Sophomore year if I remember) I began to learn the C programming language so that I could work with homebrew on the GBA. That was when I truly began to program, and I've been going strong ever since.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

mIRC client. Weird but true.

Had its only language which was pretty cool.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

1979, I was 10. My Dad brought home an Apple ][+. I took some classes with the scientists at Hughes Aircraft and started programming. Totally hooked.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

My parents bought a Commodore VIC-20 when I was 8 y/o. I started programming by typing in and modifying those BASIC games you could get in magazines.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Oh man, that was a while ago ... umm ... 1977, 2nd last year of high school, Canon Canola calculator with punched cards. Programmed a Fibonnaci sequence. Wrote the flowchart in the sand on a trip to the beach.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You know, I really have no idea what got me started. I don't even remember when I first heard about computers (at a guess, reading Popular Mechanics or Scientific American), but it was immediately obvious to me (at 8 years old or so) that programming was where I wanted to be. Prior to that, I had dabbled in electronics, and building things from Lego, but the computer was like a construction toy where you could make any kind of part you wanted.

I pestered my parents to buy me a computer pretty much from the moment microcomputers became available. If my parents had had more disposable income, I might have been one of those crazy guys with a hand-built Altair 8800 in the basement. As it was, I had to wait a few years, until computers could be bought pre-assembled :-)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Wanted to make better games. Saw all the limitations of the games at that time(which mostly still exist. >.<)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I wanted to capture the magic smoke.

Still trying, but I'm getting closer I swear!

Unleashing it is easy, capturing it is hard.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Most programmers I meet have an engineering and/or mathematical bent, even if they've never formally studied those disciplines.

But not me. I got into programming through linguistics, and in particular, grammar. I've always been fascinated by the grammar of exotic languages. Once you grok the intricacies of Ojibwe, Latin, or Yoruba, programming languages aren't terribly difficult. (At least not for me. In my 40 years on this planet, I've met many linguists who understood exotic grammars perfectly, but couldn't code their way out of a paper bag. Weird.)

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

My friend in school. He was so good at programming. He inspired me a lot.

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

For the girls. No better thing to do to pickup chicks.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

I'm a perfectionist who wants the computer to do my bidding. I have many ideas which needs to be implemented. Hence, programming.

To me, programming is the same as doing things manually, except that it's much faster. I think of it as a form of outsourcing and expression of creativity.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

My first computer was a an Apple Macintosh LC III which I was given as a tool to help me write (I have a physical disability which prvents me from writing, so i shall never know the joys of a white board), as I was so young it was heavily secured using a product by the name of At Ease which is basically a highly restrictive replacement for the Finder.

I have a vague memory of my granddad showing me the BEEP function in a very early version of Claris Works (Mac office suite), i thought this was THE most amazing thing EVER. I could make something quack whenever I wanted.

A few years later (possibly age 5) the LC III went and was replaced by a Mac PowerBook 9500C which had a different security system (SnartStuff FoolProof) that just placed restrictions on Finder, this let me discover AppleScript which I could use to make the computer crash in interesting ways, I liked doing this, it wasn't coding per se, but I think it was the precursor to it.

Skip forward a few years, the Mac has gone, replaced by the very new windows 98 SE, it was here that my adventures really began when in 1999 I received a copy of QBASIC for dummies

My first program went something like this

DO
PRINT "hI";
LOOP

From there I dabbled with HTML C++ JavaScript VBScript PHP and finally C# where I am today, it is the first language I have ever really felt comfortable in and I am enjoying learning the concepts of software design.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I got a Commodore 64 when I was ten. My brother suggested that I read the entire book before playing too much with the computer, and then read it again trying all the examples.

One or two years later I made software my dad used at his office.

Years later I learned Java basically the same way: I read a book about it.

Today my job is software development, and I consider my job as my greatest hobby.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The movie "War Games" :) Yeah, seriously. My parents had an old IBM PC jr, which had 128K of ram and no hard drive. Everything ran off 5 1/4" floppies. After watching that movie, I wrote a DOS batch file that would dump the "games" list to the screen. I was in elementary school at the time.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

a friend had a ZX 80 and we would take the listing out of a magazine and code them up.

Oh the joy of that...

Also other friends had Dragon 32 - BBC-B and we had a Commodore PET (Orange screen) at junior school (that was just a mythical beast).

I had first an intrest in electronics - but learning to code HEX on chips was a pain.

Real Programming came when started in websites in 93 at UNI - a lecture lent me a C/C++ book then when got out of UNI (was on a psych degree) got a real job as IT support and started to learn SQL then junior programmer learning VB4.

Then C/C++, Java, VB5-6 then C# ... ah sigh the fun of it all...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

They said that the dark side had cookies

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I started making custom levels for zdoom when I was 16.

It has a scripting language called ACS that is quite similar to a stripped-down version of C. Supports arrays, conditionals, loops, and has a decent documentation, which was a good place to start for me for that time.

I also got familiarized with a widely used syntax, which helped me later learning C# and PHP for example.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I used to spend my Saturday mornings wandering round the town centre looking at stuff I couldn't afford to buy. Being a young geek I like to visit John Menzies to look at the books... then one day I stumbled across a Vic20 plugged in to a monitor, "Oooh, that looks interesting!" I learned my first bit of basic programming in the shop.

I swiftly persuaded my father to jump on the bandwagon, because computers were the future! To be honest, I didn't learn to use my Vic20 to do my homework - I really just wanted to play games. A short time later, when the ZX Spectrum came on the market I dumped my Vic like a hot potato! I joined a local Computer Club, seemingly run by kids, and we learned how to copy and hack the copy protection from games :O

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

When arriving at uni, I was a total noob with computers. Then I had to learn Turbo Pascal. I hates programming for a couple of years. At the same time, I discovered the Internet and online gaming. I became involved in the development of an web-based MMORPG (on the design and game mechanisms side). Later on as university pushed some OOP lessons to me, I started enjoying programming a bit more (yeah to Java, argh to C++ and Assembly).

1 + 1 = 2 and I decided to help the development of the online game so I started programming in PHP. From that point, I really enjoyed programming. I then expanded my ranges of skills through database and even wrote my master thesis for the Computer Science department of my university as i could mix both technical IT aspects and my passion of that period: my online game.

After uni, I found a food job as programmer for embedded MCU. I worked there for 3 years before definitively quiting programmer as a job. I still code in PHP for my game anyway.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I started programming at the age of 11, on an Atari 800XL, it had a basic interpreter.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I started programming to show my dad that he didn't buy me C64 just for games. But he did! As I remember, all I've made on C64 was some textual poker game. I think I was 9 years old.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Why? Hmm, I don't know, heheh. When? Age 10 or 11, Grade 5. Pascal.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Games! Definitely games. I was 13 years old.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I was inspired by a Linux hacker i met in 1999. He said programming allows you to dictate to your computer what you want it to do, rather than let your computer dictate to you what's possible. He also said after a few years of coding you can read the code as if it's English. He was right in both cases and i've loved the challenge and learning experience for the last 9 years.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

It was fate. a cross between my zenith, the game Nibbles and Qbasic. I played the game so much and mastered it and just had to make it harder... well not really for me but for all the neighbors kids that kept coming home to play it. So i made the game run much faster when they played it but it was also a breeze for me with a simple cheat programmed into it.

link|flag
1 2 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.