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Some days I get into a rut and I just can't seem to focus. Then I think back to when I was a little kid and my parents brought home my first computer. I remember the feeling I got when my first line of code ran. I get the same feeling every time I turn an idea into code and see it work. It's too bad code isn't as readily appreciated as a piece of music or a photograph.

I would like a post I can come back to for inspiration. (Or to find out where all my rep went...)

Why did you become a programmer? Alternatively, when did you know it was what you wanted to do?

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105 Answers

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

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Yes, just watch beauty and the geek :) – rudigrobler Sep 16 '08 at 11:17
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Only if I could find some of these "girls" you speak of. – Zee JollyRoger Oct 1 '08 at 1:36
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Don't laugh. I married an IT geek. – Craig Oct 21 '08 at 4:33
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The other option was to be a lawyer so what would you choose?

.... and i like geek and hacker culture ^^

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My parents bought me Amstrad CPC464, but in Poland there were no CPC464 games in stores... The only thing left was BASIC:)

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Because I can't hit an inside curveball.

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I like to know how things work, what is in them, what they are made of and why.

So naturally I wanted to know how Websites / Applications / OSs worked and how to control them. I didn't know I wanted to be a programmer, I just sort of landed in the job. Now I get to make stuff people use on a daily basis :)

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Like usual first-generation immigrants, the market called the shot. Programming was what U.S. employers saw the best in me.

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Because programmers are basically tiny gods.

powazek.com/posts/1655

Nothing beats the thrill of creating something amazing out of nothing but a text editor and some awesome coding.

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I was working a dumb data-entry temp job, and I decided I didn't want to do the same thing over and over. I realized that the terminal emulator could be automated with something that looked like the BASIC I had used when I was a kid (remember that Morse code program you wrote? That was fun!). It turned out to be Visual Basic. Instead of firing me when he looked into why my production was so high, my boss hired me to do programming for the rest of the people . . . C#, Lisp, and Python later, here I am, still doing it.

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A lot of problems recur in life.

Became a programmer to write programs that could be executed to solve them once and for all. Automation, you know?

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From the beginning, just by coincidence. Then I realized that it was a very creative job that I could do, without having any artistic talent.

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Pong started it all for me. Damn it was so cool to see that little blob of pixels move back and forth.

So when my high school started offering a programming class, I said yeah - I am going to make games!!!! We programmed on the Apple IIe using Basic. So cool...

The teacher even had a special Apple, called a Macintosh - that no one could touch. It was in the corner of the room with a weird remote control thingy tied to a string she called a mouse - weird.

After high school, my dad bought a Sanyo computer for like 10 grand, had a printer, and not one but two floppy drives, for his business. It wasn't long before I figured that one out too. I was the office programmer at that point.

But in those times programming was just a fun thing to do, I never looked at it as a career. So I got stupid again and took retail jobs for awhile.

Then one day - I was married ( a little too early maybe ) and couldn't make my rent payment. I sat in my living room crying, a failure. How do I tell my wife we would have to move in to her parents house, because I couldn't support us.

Something in me said "No you can do this. Think - what do you know how to do besides hawk electronics for peanuts?" And that was the start of my career.

Today I do something many people don't. I earn a living doing something I started doing for fun.

Whoo hoo!!!

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Originally, I wanted to surprise my friends by writing things which they couldn't find out like hidden birthday card or some funny message. Then i found others could do the same and the war is not over :-p

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I was in the US Army from 1968 to 1971. While there I was trained to be a combat engineer and then deployed to an ADM (Atomic demolitions Munitions) unit.

We had nukes that were small enough and light enough to be carried in a backpack (do a web search for SADM if you are interested). The MADMs were a little bigger and bulkier. They could not be carried by a single person but, of course, they had more bang. It was a boring assignment, though. They never let us set one off, just train, train, train.

At some point, the computer programmer (there was only one) in our battalion was due to be rotated home but there was no replacement for him. Somehow I wound up with the job. He gave me two weeks of OJT, a stack of manuals and a UNIVAC 1005.

After I had been programming for a few months, I decided that I wanted to program computers long term. I got out of the Army, went to school (UMASS Amherst) on the GI bill and graduated with a BSCS in 1974. I have been programming ever since.

I do not recommend the Army as a career path for programmers.

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C64 definitely played the main role for me too. I got my first computer (said C64) when i was 11. After 2 weeks of game playing i figured someone is actually making all those games. That's how i got into BASIC.

Since then i always told myself: if i don't know what to do when i grow up, i'll go into IT (ok so i didn't know that term yet, but that's not the point here). Now, 20 years later, i still don't know. And i probably never will.

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Not sure really, it always used to frustrate me when I didn't know how things worked. So I learnt to program to help myself better understand things.

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For my interest! Nothing else!

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I was born one.

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Because it gives immediate feedback.

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My decision was based completely on supply and demand. This is my second career, my first was for a construction trade, and I graduated into a recession.

However, software development is a perfect fit for my talents and interests. I guess I just lucked out by having my first choice fall apart.

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I blame my dad... I wanted to fix computers, he made me take programming classes as well (hey he was footing the bill). I found out I liked programming and stuck with it.

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Web developing and pro designing is my pashion. I can't imagine a more creative job than this. I gonna make crazy money someday from this. When this time comes, I'll come back here and tell you my story. Until then, become a more open minded vendor/developer/programmer/man(or woman) :)

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4 characters - ZX81

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I am too a ZX Spectrum starter. I had a ZX Spectrum clone, called HC-90.

That started it. It came with almost nothing. The BASIC interpreter, a manual of the BASIC language FULL of mistakes and that was it. I begin typing the code samples which were almost all wrong. So I started correcting them and they finally worked out. Then they were broadcasting (no copyright law I suppose) software at the TV as audio signal which we would record on tapes and play back later loading it into the RAM and executing.

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Atari 800 c.1979 I was about 14 and begged my parents to help me get one with my part-time job savings (when it was OK for kids to work!) and their help. I had already gotten a hold of several Byte Magazine issues and was hooked. Coding Sprites and collision detection and audio on 4-voice polyphonic synthesizers! It really was an amazing machine.

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I am the type of guy who realises something is very important only after he's lost it.

I discovered I had to be a programmer after I had chosen another field at the University and I felt nauseated trying to learn things I couldn't care less.

Fortunately I was able to revert this and I guess there are few other knowledge fields out there as dynamic as programming (like, I couldn't name a field if I tried).

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I became a programmer because I loved creating things. To see a simple little screen flicker and think "Hey, I made that. It is my child, it is special to me. I love my little screen," it made me feel good. I love thinking and solving problems, even though the struggle can be quite a pain sometimes.

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Accidentally.

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I have always considered it a form of poetry in motion, truly.

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I got a TI-85 calculator and found myself in a physics class where I couldn't solve the problems. So, I read the manual and figured out how to write a program to solve projectile motion, and other basic trig phsyics stuff. Programming a solver was just easier than teaching myself to be the solver.

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I figured it made sense given the degree I graduated with from university after noticing that my grades weren't quite good enough to go to grad school, graduating average being 75% and most of the good grad schools want a 78% minimum. I graduated from the University of Waterloo with an Honour's Bachelor of Mathematics with majors in Computer Science and Combinatorics & Optimization with a Pure Math minor. I have been a Math geek most of my life as I enjoy solving puzzles and playing with numbers. Another aspect was that when I graduated university it was 1997 and the dot-com boom was on where being a developer was a bit of a natural field to get into as I didn't take any Act. Sci. courses or Statistics to get into that field.

I like solving problems and puzzles and seeing the joy that can come from delivering some new technology that lets someone do something more easily or for the first time like in the case of some application that lets a user view some data from a database in the proper perspective. I've also been using computers since I was like 8 years old which also played a role.

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