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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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To get a decent job.

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vote up 10 vote down

I have an English degree, but I enjoy sleeping in a dry room and eating food I don't have to steal.

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vote up 0 vote down

Joining a startup was the "cool" thing to do when I graduated from college at the height of the dot-com boom.

Now if only I'd graduated a couple years earlier... ;)

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Right from Fourth standard (i.e from 1991) that was when I was first introduced to computer. I started working with Basic and then tried my hands on wordstar, later the whole idea of creating something that could work and give you response was so amazing that I couldn't stop myself becoming a programmer and I am happy to be what I am.

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I had a dilemma; either deal with people or deal with computers.. the choice was obvious..

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Thrill of the Hunt.

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I am addicted to stress.
I don't have a normal sleep schedule.
I wear what I want to and most tech bosses don't care.

I am an ego maniac and narcissist with an inferiority complex IE: it is imposable for me to say the words "No, it can't be done" and when I hear those words I gotta prove somebody wrong, and be the first to do so.

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I wanted to do something with computers. My senior year in high school I took a class where I learned HTML, and the rest is history.

I continue to be a programmer because I absolutely couldn't imagine doing anything else. I love it.

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vote up 8 vote down

gorilla.bas plain and simple.

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I loved the problem solving aspects of maths at school and loved messing around on computers so it was a natural progression from there.

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Because it's much better then work coal in Donbass mines.

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Thinking about it, I think I started programming because I ran out of things to mess with on my grampa's computer. I had fully explored all applications I found, ways to change setings, color schemes in Windows 3.1 etc. and it was getting boring. I started with simple BAT files, then my uncle installed Borland Delphi.

The point you can come back to: Programming is fun because, in comparison, most other stuff is boring :)

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vote up 0 vote down

Because it's the most unlimited creative medium. It's a very direct mind-to-result path.

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I could enjoy what I do (bein a computer geek) and make hella money doin it too.

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At age 7 I got my first 80286. The first word I learned to type was 'autoexec'. At age 12 I went to an extracurricular course on BASIC. That's when I decided this is what I wanted to do with my life.

At 26 I realize that decision I made at age 12 was probably the best I've ever made.

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I had a ZX Spectrum when they first came out, but wasn't really into games, so my dad got me to learn BASIC (I think this was his secret agenda anyway). I had a nerdy brain at 10 so this all fitted in well.

Thanks dad, I'm now earning far more than I would have done otherwise, and have managed to land a web developer job at my dream company (sailing)

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vote up 6 vote down
10 PRINT "BECAUSE ITS COOL" 
20 GOTO 10

(Not tested)

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2  
OMG he used GOTO - watch out for the velociraptor!! – Hannson Jun 18 at 1:08
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I prepared for and went to coding competitions with my friends at high school. That created some good initial memories, and it's been hard to walk away from fate since then.

There's still time for a 180-degree turn.

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vote up 26 vote down

I didn't become a programmer: I was born a programmer.

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I got a ZX81 1981 when I was 14yrs and since then it has been a Path of Least Resistance for me.

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I just followed my father's footsteps.
I don't know anybody else who's father also is a programmer (RPG III), at least not of my age (almost 40 years).
When I was 14 years, I wrote my first programs, in MSX-Basic. Soon discovering assembly, and Turbo Pascal followed with a natural flow.

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I have no idea. It just worked out.

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Pacman on a PC. I was in 5th grade when I started playing it. I was totally hooked.Wrote some DOS based games in school.

The whole idea of taking an abstract idea and creating it into something useful - that is a rush! Doesn't matter if it is Hello World. Just beautiful!

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vote up 0 vote down

Started with LOGO on a BBC Micro, but I never knew there was something called programming. I just thought we were having fun.

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Programming is the closest thing to working with clay for a living besides making pottery.

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I ran out of ideas with Lego... and bored kids give parents a hard time.

... so my doctor's father recommended a ZX, which got me started with Basic. Then a Euro PC (Scheneider, smth you yankees never heard of till eight words ago), then an IBM 486sx, with it Pascal, VB, C, C++, it just rolled in with education and work needs.

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Because I wanted to make things that did exactly what I wanted. I started working with other peoples code and making adjustments and adapting, till I realised, hey I could make these myself, so i did!

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It was a more intellectually stimulating that repairing computers.

And the chicks, definately for the chicks

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I've been an avid gamer for about 20 years and I drifted into computing/programming. Now I'm trying desperately to drift out of it because I don't really enjoy it. I much prefer to enjoy other peoples code in the form of games!

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vote up 0 vote down

because my talent as a footballer wasn't spotted

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