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If you can remember that far back, what did the first computer program you ever wrote do (once you had finished debugging it)?

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Mine was a rocket taking off. Something like:

10 PRINT "  /\"
20 PRINT " /  \"
30 PRINT " |  |"
40 PRINT " |  |"
50 PRINT " |  |"
60 PRINT " |  |"
70 PRINT " |  |"
80 PRINT "/====\"
90 PRINT " ####"
100 PRINT
110 GOTO 100

Aw GWBASIC, I hardly knew ye...

-Adam

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I almost marked this post as offensive :) – Even Mien Sep 24 '08 at 18:51
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10 PRINT "JON IS AWESOME"
20 GOTO 10
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You have a bug in your program. Line 10 should read 10 PRINT "CRAIG IS AWESOME" – Craig Oct 16 '08 at 0:04
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You have a bug in your program. Line 10 should read 10 PRINT "JON SKEET IS AWESOME" – A. Scagnelli Aug 21 at 13:20
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vote up 9 vote down

It moved a turtle around the screen :)

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Guess a number between 1 and 100 game :)

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My first computer program was a little animated man that looked like he was walking, on a Texas Instruments TI 99/4a

Soon after that I got a cartridge of Extended Basic and had access to sprites and joystick functions, so I attempted to make a Super Mario clone. Unfortunately, due to the receipt of an actual Nintendo (NES) the project was canceled indefinitely.

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My first 'program' just multiplied two numbers. It was hard-coded in machine instructions in an E-PROM chip for my electronics course in high-school.

I consider myself lucky to have learnt programming all the way from the hardware level up.

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My first program was writing a Mad Libs program in QBasic. It was the worst spaghetti code you can imagine with the story templates written directly into the code. I carried it and a version of QBasic around on a floppy to show everyone - I was 11 years old at the time.

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G'day,

It was a FORTRAN programme, entered on punch cards, at the Royal Military College, Duntroon in Australia in '75. West Point (Sandhurst and Duntroon maintain a tight list of ties together).

The machine was a huge GE mainframe, donated by the company my father worked for, that had core memory. Professor Swan, who'd previously taught physics to my father at RMC, showed me how to program it.

The programme just added a couple of numbers together. But when I saw the results dumped out, I was hooked.

Ooh. Just had a major flashback. My first actual programme was on my own Digi-comp in 1966 and it counted from 0 (where else) up to 7. My Dad brought one back to Oz for me after making one of his visits to the States for work.

I can't believe they're making the Digi-comp again. Gotta buy me one!

cheers,

Rob

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I didn't consider myself actually programming until I picked up The C Programming Language by K&R in high school and I made this silly thing, but thinking back to the good old days, I did have some fun with hypercard in 6th grade, where I made a rhythm quiz game -- it generated a measure full of different note values and you had to guess the time signature.

And then I implemented BomberMan in StarCraft, among other things. StarCraft is totally a programming language, right?

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My first one was used the Circle() and Paint() statement in GWBASIC. And using the randomizer to draw circles of various sizes and colors (or rather, shades of CGA grey) on the screen.

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My first ever original program was in Sinclair BASIC. It drew a picture of the Death Star using CIRCLE statements, and played the theme from The Empire Strikes Back with BEEP commands.

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I did 'Hello World', because that's what I had read was traditional as a first program, and who was I to question tradition?

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A ticker that showed promotional messages for a non-profit organization in my neighbourhood. It was written in basic on a C64. I had to turn my television/monitor so it faced the window so people could actually see it. If anyone saw it at all ;-)

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BASIC, 1982, I was 8 yrs old, a small program asking for 2 numbers and then adding them.

I thought loops were the coolest thing on the face of the earth...

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One of my first programs, not sure if it was the absolute first one, went like this:

INPUT "Please enter your name: ", name$
IF name$ = "Ray" THEN
  PRINT "You're cool"
ELSE
  PRINT "You suck"
END IF
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I'm sure my very first one was just a simple "Hello World" in C++. After that I can't remember exactly what I did first but one of the early ones I can remember was a poker game. If I remember correctly, I didn't write the logic for all of the possible poker hands, but it did have some of the functionality. It wasn't graphical at all, everything was text-based from the command line.

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Mine was a circle bouncing off the edges of the screen. Something like this (pseudo):

while(true) {
  drawCircle(x,y);
  x = x - dx;
  y = y - dy;
  if (dx > 0 && x == 0)
   dx = -dx;
  ... and so on
  clearscreen;
}

hypnotizing images :P

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Mine was actualy... compiling. And that's exactly what I was trying to do :)

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It was a program asking you how you felt, and the answer was different whether you said something like good ("well, that's great!") or bad ("ooooh, too bad, sorry for you!").

I think I was twelve, in GWBASIC, on a PC XT @8MHz with amber screen and Hercules gfx card.

After I saw I could start from nothing and create something that, well, worked (?), I was hooked on programming.

From there I tried to "re-make" every single program or game I liked in BASIC, such as Car Wars, Bomberman, Slot Racer (an old atari 2600 2-player game). I remember I made a "level editor" (well, sort of) in character mode for Slot Racer and Bomberman. My skills were so poor at the time, needless to say my remakes were not so great, graphics- and playability-wise :D

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I drew a square, in LOGO.

Probably along the lines of:

FORWARD 100
RIGHT 90
FORWARD 100
RIGHT 90
FORWARD 100
RIGHT 90
FORWARD 100
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A mIRC script that used sockets to connect/login to a website and dynamically 'vote' on a specified list of url-profiles. I had written a few other very very basic scripts in mirc before this, but that was the first that did anything significant.

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I think everyone really started with something like: 10 PRINT "BUTT" 20 GOTO 10.

My first real program was a AD&D char generator. You could put in what kind of dude you wanted and it would randomly generate stats until an acceptable one was generated. I'll you you a paladin could take a few seconds back on my 286.

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My first program was a menu system written in QBASIC that ran from the AUTOEXEC.BAT on DOS. It allowed you to pick what you wanted to run (games, Win 3.1, etc.). Unfortunately it was a bit of a RAM hog :P

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Mine was in BASIC on an Sinclair ZX81, almost 30 years ago now. I don't remember what the program was but we got the computer for Christmas when I was seven and I worked my way through the manual and any other BASIC programming book I could find. Looking at the manual, it was probably the little program to print the square root of a number entered by the user.

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I seem to remember doing a Fahrenheit/Celsius converter. In Algol 68. On punched cards. The cool kids were using Commodore PETs at the time...

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10 INPUT "INPUT NUMBER: " : A  
20 FOR I=1 TO 10  
30 ? A " * " I " = " A * I  
40 NEXT  
50 END

Maybe I've forgot all sintatic details, but I was like 8 year old. I clearly remember that ? was PRINT on Commodore's Basic

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Drew tangent lines on the graph of a function. TI-81.

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Wrote a program in Visual Basic that tormented/helped America Online back in the 3.0 days...

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Mine was a snake game in QBASIC. Given that I didn't have access to any learning material, I didn't use SUBs, just GOTO statements, so after a fixed amount of iterations, the interpreter ran out of stack, and the program crashed. Took me a while to figure out what was happening!

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I made a blackjack style game on my TI-83 calculator. ^_^

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