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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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I had a problem that I needed solved and I didn't have the money to pay someone else, and no one else wanted to do it for free. So, with no clue what I was doing, I did it myself, I haven't stopped in the years since.

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I got a Commodore 64 for Xmas when I was 11 and was immediately curious how I could make it do something that I told it to. Taught myself BASIC and the rest is history. 20 years later, I still get a thrill when I get something to work (especially on the first compile)

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Works on first compile == true happiness. – TonyOssa Oct 1 '08 at 0:58
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Simple answer, I was bored one night years ago.

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I became a programmer because I always enjoyed it... back to the days of hacking with basic from programs I got out of a book.

I knew I was going to be a programmer probably in early high school when I was already taking source from a MUD and playing around with it, figuring out how it worked (and when I spent a month or so writing a chess game for my TI-83+).

I remember taking a career guidance test... it said I should work outdoors, like on a farm... so I went back and modified my answers till it said I should work with computers... talk about a nerd, huh?

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I stuck a disk in our Apple IIe and it booted up to a BASIC prompt. I looked at that little blinking cursor and thought, "hmm, this looks interesting".

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Personally it's probably because of my love of videogames as a kid. Also I remember getting one of those computer toys as a kid, and it included a pretty basic version of... well, BASIC. The manual had some examples as well, and I loved creating schedulers and phone books.

More recently, I attended CLEI 2007 (Conferencia Latinoamericana en Informatica) and saw Neil Gershenfeld's keynote (director at MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms) which pretty much blew me away and reassured me I made the right career decision. It was a great experience and I'm pretty sure it made me more confident of my choice. (For the record, Richard Stallman was also at that event, but that was more fun than eye-opening).

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I love learning, and our field is guaranteed to be constantly changing. It seemed obvious to me 20 years ago that it was a growing field as well.

/Allan

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I became a programmer largely because of Shadowrun on the Sega Genesis. Something about it just drew me into the tech world (I was already a geek), and is probably responsible for my love of embedded programming. I want my cyberdeck!

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  • Originally because I wanted to make games.
  • Then because I seemed good at it.
  • Then because I was inspired by some great bloggers.
  • Then because I read The Pragmatic Programmer and Code Complete.
  • Then because I thought I could make a living out of creating cool stuff.

Now? Because I hope to one day be working with a team of people passionate about what they do.

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I became a programmer because I loved all of:

  • spending time with computers
  • finding out how they worked
  • building things
  • helping people

Programming allows you to cover all those things.

I'm constantly thankful that I'm doing something which I love.

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I started with Antic and Analog. Programming magazines for Atari computers with great games, utilities, and challenges. I got satisfaction from making the computer "do something." As I got older, I changed my major several times in college, but came back to programming since I found that joy. Now, in the business world, I see my code saving people time and making our company more successful. I've been effective at making the computer do what I want it to with vision that was developed early on and that has provided a good life for my family. It's a great profession.

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I used to use mIRC, and Internet Relay Chat program, which was scriptable. It started off by wanting to change the colour/format of incoming text (events). Then it was creating shortcuts to regular functions (aliases). Finally, it became a way to interact with websites from a command line (sockets/procedural).

Had to do some programming work in an IT class in high school and I always just seemed to 'get it'. I enjoyed it thoroughly. Just kept going.

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Because it's fun. And it's the best way to be a mathematician without being a professor.

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I enjoyed playing with Logo Writer as a little kid. Never stopped enjoying programming.

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I was always a geek, and eventually I got a job that involved a lot of repetitive spreadsheet work. I worked hard on my Excel VBA skills and whittled my job down to about 1 mouse-click per week. The rest was surfing!

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Ten years ago I would say it was because I could make a lot of money doing it to buy crap I don't need that would force me to work more, which in turn allowed me to buy more crap. I don't buy crap now, but my wife loves that because of my job she can stay at home with our baby daughter full time. I became a programmer for all the wrong reasons, but now I do it so that I can go home and see both of their smiling faces, knowing that the work I do helps provide food and clothing for the people in my life that I love most. Not many careers allow you to do that.

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I love solving problems, designing stuff, and in general writing code. It's my zen, if you will.

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Decided to become a programmer quite late compared to most of people.

Fresh out of college, my first job was a computer guy in a small company After one and only developer left the company, I took over.

It was fun and got hooked. It was like a drug.

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It started with a research paper in high school. I picked up Computer Science in college.. I didn't even know exactly what I was getting myself into.

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Started with the video games as a kid, which led me to an Atari 400, sprite programming, and adding a memory board to it, all on my own. I was a confirmed bit-head from then on.

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I was intrigued when I got the famous Popular Electronics issue with the Altair on the cover. I was almost 10 at the time, and I knew I needed to know more about these things.

When the TRS-80 Model 1 appeared in stores, my mom would drop me off at Radio Shack while she ran errands, and the salesmen let me play.

It's been downhill ever since.

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It all started with Chipmunk BASIC on an old Apple System 7. I discovered to my dismay that there were a number of programs that I just didn't understand. The syntax made sense, but I couldn't understand the why behind the what. Since I hate puzzles that I can't solve, I ended up sticking with it until I could understand. By the time I understood "Go Fish", I was hooked.

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Like a lot of people, I was drawn to the rise of 3D first-person shooters, namely the epic DOOM series. Like a lot of people, I wanted to program games because I wanted to be involved in creating your own universe out of nothing.

Then I found out how arduous the game industry is/can be. At around this time, I discovered that I get the same ethereal feeling, sense of satisfaction, and creative rush when writing most code. It is like the thrill you get when you solve a math problem and it all suddenly works.

So I became a programmer to chase that feeling and get my daily fix.

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One word: Zork!

I was in 5th or 6th grade when my mother brought a dumb terminal w/ a modem home from work. To dial in, you didn't plug the phone line into the terminal, you took one of those old-style Ma Bell phones and stuck the handset into these rubber suction cups on the back, i.e. it actually used the phone's speaker and mic. It didn't have a screen, either. Instead, it printed everything on a roll of thermal paper. Once all the beep boop rrrrrrr sounds settled down, I saw this:

West of House
You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door.
There is a small mailbox here.

>open mailbox

I was never the same after that. I remember the thing that most enchanted me was the conversational nature of the game play (although I wouldn't have phrased it that way at the time). I could type English words and the computer would understand me. Not only that, but it talked back! Turtle Graphics, this was not. It was literally the coolest thing I'd ever seen; it was just pure unadulterated awesome. Wielding my trusty Elvish sword, I forged ahead into the Great Underground Empire. But there were challenges...

>go down
You have moved into a dark place.
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.

This particular passage always made adults just laugh and laugh, but it wasn't until many years later that I figured out why this was so funny. :o

I was into rpgs and choose-your-own-adventure books at the time, and I was just fascinated with the idea that a machine could do that. I wanted to know how it worked; not only that, I wanted to know how I could make it work, and that's ultimately how I ended up where I am today.

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I loved electronics and wanted to learn everything about it. So naturally programming went along with this.

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I want to see my name on the ending credits of the game that I play. Thats why

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When I was about 12, we got an Apple ][e. You had to learn BASIC to do anything. Since then I was hooked. Like most, at first I wanted to make games. Now I just want to make something people will use :)

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Joy of creation - seeing something that I created work & solve a real (pseudo also does it :) problem .

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Because its the only one of my hobbies that I could convince someone to pay me to do.

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