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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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I enjoy it and it enables a reasonable standard of living. It satisfies my technical lean as well as requiring creativity.

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So I can implement my ideas rather than having the inefficiency of getting someone else do do so.

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I wasn't in the upper 1% of my astrophys degree. Programming provides the closest mainstream approximation of my failed ambitions in professional astronomy.

All things considered, I'm better off :)

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I did it for the girls.

When I find my careers advisor I'm going to kill him.

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exactly Dixon's point actually... – Andreas Grech Dec 12 '08 at 11:08
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Girls enough: Ada, Lisa, Miranda, (there are possibly more examples). – Gamecat Dec 29 '08 at 8:53
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I didn't choose it - it chose me!

My degree was in Chemical Engineering which had quite a bit of lab work, and the write-ups required processing large sets of data in Excel to find trends etc. and perform calculations. I used to do it all manually by copying, pasting, dragging etc. and had spent about 2 days doing this in one spreadsheet, so was getting pretty bored of doing it. I went home to visit my parents and my dad (who is also a developer) took one look, said that was a waste of time, wrote a 10 line VBA macro, and finished my next two days work in 10 minutes.

I figured I'd better learn a bit of this funny looking VBA stuff and found that I enjoyed doing it... then I progressed onto solving other problems using VB6 and enjoyed that too... much more so than chemical engineering.

So when it came to be time to apply for a job I just sent off a form to Microsoft an (rather surprisingly) got a job there. Without ever really having intended to become a developer.

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I chose it because I do not believe that there is anything better when you can take what was once a hobby that you are passionate about and make a very comfortable living from it.

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I started because I have always been good with computers then I started learning programming when I started at work so that I could do some liitle tasks with the data that I had, then its just rolled on from there.

Pretty good considering my grade 7 teacher told my mum and dad I would never amount to anything because all I was good at was computers.

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I really enjoy it and there is plenty of work available at good salaries.

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I chose software over hardware as I did a CS-related degree (Cybernetics and Control Engineering) and like creating things but am too impatient to do hardware design (waiting for delivery of components, waiting for construction of PCBs etc).

I like the immediacy of writing software (as well as the ability to undo any work - within reason - without penalty).

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I am good at it.

Always choose a profession you are good at, rather than one you enjoy. This means you can get more work done at a better quality compared to other people in the same profession.

Never choose something you enjoy (unless you are good at it) because eventually you will not enjoy it any more. I always say: "Imagine if Van Gogh had had to paint walls for a living. He might go so mad he would cut off his own ear".

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Fame... what do you mean you have never heard of me!

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I had to take an occupational aptitude test in High School, which was supposed to tell me the three careers for which I was best suited, based on my skills and interests.

My three careers where:

  1. Forest Ranger
  2. Ventriliquist
  3. Computer Programmer

Since I hate camping, and I didn't know how to do ventriliquism, I decided to become a computer programmer.

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I got into programming because:

  1. Its one of the few ways you can actually build something without being good with your hands
  2. Instant gratification. You write a few lines of code and something happens as soon as you compile.
  3. I love technology, and programming is a way to include me in something cool and exciting.
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When I was 12 I thought that I want to make computer games. I tried picking up C++ at that age, but it failed to capture me. I went ahead and trained for the job of computer artist.

At age 18 I saw a course called Game Programming, and thought, "I want to do that!".

So, I went from artist-wannabe to professional programmer.

The result is me being one of the few programmers that actually can make some pretty graphics.

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I got a Z80 from my dad when I was 16-17 and since in those days there were no really off shelf games to buy I got some books with game listings in BASIC tic tac toe and such. After some time typing in these I started to understand how things worked, so I got more and more interested. After that I choose computer science at the University and sort of that is how I ended up in this business. I still find programming fun cause there is always something new to learn, even 20+ years later.

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According to my wife, it's because I can build things without actually getting my hands dirty.

She is probably right.

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I went to uni to do Management majoring in HR, and thought why do 1 degree in 3 years when i can get 2 in 4? I'm a natural with computers, that can be my bludge subject... The rest is history

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I knew I could write better code then most of the junk I was working with, so I did.

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A top helpdesk / support engineer makes what a Junior Dev makes (In the northeast US). I got tired of the dead-end, and my employer at the time allowed me to move over to engineering. As soon as I was there, I was assigned all of the bugs I reported as a support tech (about a hundred).

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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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I didn't, it chose me.

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

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

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