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What was your objective/reason behind choosing programming as a profession.?

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What's better than getting paid for doing something you actually enjoy doing eh?

That's why it was the obvious choice of a career for me...programming gives me satisfaction in seeing my creations work as expected, and it's a journey in where you are constantly learning new things and maybe even meeting new people, with diverse ideas and opinions.

If programming for you is a passion, then choosing a programming career will be one of the best things you will do in your life.

There's nothing better than waking up in the morning feeling great because you are going to work...

And besides, having also programming as a hobby ( and drumming ;-) ), like many of the developers posting here on Stack Overflow, having go to work and programming all day long will give you a chance to keep on learning every single day, instead of only learning during your all-nighters

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Because my hands are not enough more than touch keyboard and click mouse. (and I like it ofcourse)

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it had me at hello world.

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I wanted to be a poet but my poetry sucked.

My Mom wanted me to become a doctor, but I didn't enjoy dissecting the pig in biology class and the thought of doing this on humans was ...a little sickening.

My Dad was a physicist and I had some talent for that, but frankly I had no chance as someone dabbling in pre-med and Engish against guys taking nothing but math and physics courses.

Luckily I remembered a friend told me (a Berkeley EE grad) that I would probably be good at programming, since I liked to play GO and was good at that. I tried a few programming courses and was hooked.

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It's my mistake. :) Anyway, I learn to love it somehow. ;)

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In my case it's the education system and the trend to begin with and a personal liking at the end.

Till Class X, I was one of the toppers. It was a trend that top 20% of people chose Science for Class XI and Class XI, the rest chose Commerce/Arts fields. I chose Science.

In Class XI, Class XII, I was again one of the better scores there. And I could either go into medical field or engineering. I was interested in medical field, but did not choose it because it required more money as compared to engineering and that I could not afford it. So it was engineering I had to choose.

As I was one of the better scorers, I could get into one of top universities, and then there was this trend that people would select specialization in this order. Computer science, Eletronics, Electrical, Mechanical, Chemical and so on. So as I had Computer sciece seat available in a good university, I chose computer science.

During my computer enginnering tenure, I developed a love for programming and now I am a software developer.

Before joining engineering, I had very little idea of what I was about to find out in computer enginering, but, now I am glad that I took that decision and glad about about the way situation made me take enginnering(computer) than getting into medical field.

As they say everything happens for a reason.

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I love programming because I keep on finding new challenges, while learning new techniques and technologies.

Actually the real motivation is that I can pay my bills and start potential future business. Planning to create something that some company/somebody will buy for bzillionss of dollars. Or at least free from working and use SO all the time.

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Went to college to be an Electrical Engineer - it never 'clicked' for me. Took a required programming class (pascal) and it all "just clicked"...I don't think I chose programming as a profession...it chose me.

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I did actually not chose it. I was led to, since people around me saw I was able to do so, even at my very young age (at that point).

You might want to have a look at this excellent reading , last blogpost of Jeff Atwood.

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In short: Because I love it!

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It was all because of a contest

Back in school I wanted to be a lot of things, but being a programmer didn't figure in the list. I was interested in programming though, just not professionally.

In high-school I participated in a couple of city-level programming contests and the won them. That set my path I guess.

I've always loved programming and the fact that the users of my software say they love 'em makes the job even more delicious. I like working on new technology, and these days I am getting plenty of opportunity to do that.

How much of my life is programming?

-- The first thing I do when I wake up is switch on my PC
-- The last thing I do before going to bed is switch off my PC.

It's the greatest job in the world!

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I wanted to create something. And for me it was writing or programming. I was better at programming so I choose programming.

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Personally, it was a case of being in the right place at the right time.

Once I got started, I realised that I absolutely loved it. There's so much about being a programmer that I love - Problem solving, exercising my creativity, flexible hours and there's always something new to learn.

I guess the only downside is that 90% of the time that I'm awake, I'm thinking about programming. It is really hard to put it aside.

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I started programming when I was 9 and since I can't do anything else for money I have no other choice but program. In fact, as I grow and can build more complex things, my enjoyment of getting something hacked together grows over time as well.

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I originally wanted to do game development. I did a lot of learning on C++ for it. Never made any games, but came out with an awesome skill set that I was able to get a job with.

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I worked as a research analyst in finance for an year and all I was doing was creating documents and projecting past data into the future. I realised it's going to take 3 years to verify if my projections were right and anyway it was boring. Programming was far more creative and you get to see your output immediately and in most cases, your users actually end up using your product. It's fun when you are learning all the time. Feedback is critical for learning and in programming you get immediate feedback.

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Well, I had a college degree in computer science, so it seemed like a good way to make money. I got the degree because I wanted to learn more about programming, I'd always loved it and started programming in middle school. I didn't think too much about a career, honestly.

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When I graduated from university in 1997, I had a degree in Computer Science and Combinatorics & Optimization. I had enjoyed coding and really liked problem solving, so I sort of saw for myself a career as a software developer that would let me use my skills, both what I explicitly learned and the skills I had developed over the years. My grades weren't quite good enough to get me into grad schools and the dot-com boom was going on, so it seemed like a good thing to jump in on.

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I became a doctor. My specialty is reading xrays and cat scans on a computer all day

I started programming because my computer wasn't doing what i wanted it to do.

I have found programming as intellectually challenging as medicine and as satisfying.

I think people that sit on a computer all day have to know programming.

Otherwise they are just throwing a chunk of their life away unnecessarily.

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It was the only profession that I could start right after college (at relatively young age of 22) that required me to think on the job. This is not to say that it's the only profession that requires thinking on the job. But doctors can't start their career until their late 20's or even after that, and same thing for lawyers. Other professions (yes non-computer engineers included) seem to require more "pushing paper", and/or doing repetitive administrative tasks, but then again I only had one job at 22 so I didn't know about other professions. It was just my conclusion that I had when I was 19, so I chose it.

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Once I got hooked on programming, it never occurred to me to do anything else.

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I love programming for myself, on my own time, but found that I could not live in Corporate America, sitting in a cube all day, making money for someone else. I still like programming but not as a slave. Two years later I got into teaching and I'm much happier now. I still get to work with computers and do my own programming projects.

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I saw that I wouldn't be bored at all doing programming from the few programming courses I took in my Electrical Engineering major and jumped on board.

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A couple of reasons:

  • HAL 9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey - need I say more?
  • I learned how to type on computers (I wanted to write stories) and got interested in their inner workings because of that.
  • I was into CB-radio as a kid, but there were few people around me that I could talk to (and getting into ham radio was out of my reach), so I latched onto BBSes as a replacement, which led to the Internet, which led to learning HTML, which led to learning programming, which led to a degree in Computer Science.

Simple, really!

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Programming is an adventure full of fun, awe, thrill and excitement for me.

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Because I wanted to work with cool equipment. Computers with rotating rack-sized magnetic tapes, were the stuff of science fiction movies when I was a kid. Now I'm lucky to have at work and at home computers more powerful than those that put the man on the Moon. I thus feel like I'm living in a science fiction movie; my childhood dreams have come true.

Also, I was hopeless with most of the things we did at school. My handwriting was terrible, my spelling was even worse, I was sloppy in math, and I couldn't remember the figures, facts, and formulas needed for history, chemistry, physics, and many other subjects. I also had trouble integrating with the other kids, because I was also hopeless at sports. In front of a computer all these things were at a stroke irrelevant: the letters always appeared crisp, it could spell check my writing, the compiler could check my syntax and I could check a program's execution until I got it correct, online help would remind me all the facts I needed to know, and the computer could keep me company all day. When I programmed I felt I escaped all the problems around me (I think it shows in the programs I was writing as a kid), I felt I was in heaven.

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I originally was double majoring in Marine Biology and Computer Science. After the first year I came to the conclusion that there were two types of marine biologists in the world... the kind who get the really cool gigs and dive off the great barrier reef and the kind who work the consession stands at Seaworld hoping for an internship to open up. Computer Science was the 'easy money'. 25 years later, I'd rather be flipping burgers :/

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It was unintentional (I was a child, and those BASIC Listings in the magazines looked really interesting). But now, it is driven with the desire to create something. To leave something behind, to have "Michael was here" written on the world, persisting long after I am gone. I am not an artist nor a musician, but I believe that it's also possible to make an impact on the world as a developer.

Essentially, when I retire, I do not want to have the feeling to have wasted my entire life. Being able to look at something and being able to say: This is really MINE.

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I didn't, it chose me.

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Because in my experience, programmers were treated better and had more resources available (comp, community, knowledge base, etc.) than doc specialists, gui developers, qa, or any of the other jobs "around" the actual writing of code that I've held before.

The world values devs.

Now that I'm actually doing appdev, that assessment has held true. I'm not looking back.

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