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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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I would argue that most of the commenters here didn't become programmers, but just came to the realization that they've always been programmers and then worked to improve their skills...

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You know that (completely untrue statement), "Those that can't do, teach"? Well, in my case, those that can't teach 9th grade chemistry to seniors and juniors quit their job and get paid to program instead. I should have seen the signs though. I would often lose track of time in college while writing modeling applications to solve physics problems to the same degree that I would while trying to track down the Knights of the Round materia in Final Fantasy VII...and I enjoyed it as much as well!

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I liked the logic and process of the engineering field, but decided late in the game that I really didn't care how the physical properties of the P-N-P or N-P-N junction devices worked. I had done some programming and felt that I was pretty good about picking that up as well as foreign languages and music. I felt that these were related, so this would be a good fit. It also didn't hurt that it's a lot easier to debug software in most cases than a breadboard.

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I wanted to write stuff that made people scream in pain, boil in anger and cry out in frustration. Easiest way to do it was so write legacy multithreaded C++ code. So here i am.

On a more serious note, programming appealed to my sense of logic. It is a way for me to exercise my brain. The thrill of solving problems - making proof of concepts. I guess i just suffer from Rubik's syndrome, i NEED to solve the puzzle... but once im done with it, i have no incentive to follow through.

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I originally was a computer engineer in college and I didn't really like programming (C++/Java), but when I learned Assembly, I loved it. It made sense. I tried to get into the chip fabrication area, didn't have the grades for it at the time, but a friend of mine had a job opening in Florida for a web programmer (entry level). I took the job and here I am!

I've learned VB.Net/ASP.Net and SQL by basically being thrown into the job. I really wish they would have had me learn assembly before C++ or Java as I like learning about the roots before I see something high-end. I have messed with Oracle, and C# as well, and now I'm learning Silverlight. I really like to see the differences between the languages and I enjoy learning new products.

Looking back, I think that if I would have taken programming in HS (had they offered it) I would have liked it more than I did in college.

I kinda miss the chip fab labs, but I enjoy being able to not have to worry about dangerous chemicals while I'm working.

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The Commodore 64 tricked me into it in the eighties, and I have been hooked since.

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I actually fell into programming. I had taken a couple courses at university, but was unemployed when I graduated. A friend called me up and asked if I could help him with a software project. I said yes, and the rest is history.

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Computers intrigued and attracted me since I learn of their existance. It's not a scientific thing at all, I just thought they were the coolest thing. For years I just wanted to be left alone in a room with one, though I wouldn't have known what to do with it. That was before puberty.

After dwelling in art and psychological experiences I had to settle for a practical career and here I am, it is a career that lets me be how I want and arrange the strangest work schedules. It makes you learn a lot about all kinds of industries and fields without having to be locked in and lets you ask every stupid question you want to the specialists.

I think we programmers are the actual users of the computers. Users are just users of our programs.

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I am obviously the dinosaur of the group. I learned to program in FORTRAN on a mainframe using punch cards before my senior year in high school. I was fascinated at the ability to give a machine a list of things to do and have it follow my instructions. In college, I hung around the computer room and saw people do interesting things, such as ASCII plots, and experimented until I could do it too.

But I never considered it as a career since all the guys hanging out at the computer room (it was rare for a woman to come there), the computer science majors, had no social skills. Even I, a Geek physics major, recognized that.

But in graduate school, I got my MS in physics largely because I was able to do data analysis on the computer. And as I started work in the Air Force, I found at each job I could contribute the most by automating things. After a while, it became the main thing I did at each new job. Although I have retired from the Air Force, I still work full time as a scientific software developer.

But I am also a programmer as a hobby. I can’t stand the majority of commercial software because it doesn’t work the way I want it to. I still want the computer to do what I want. Computers do work for me… I will not do work for a computer.

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Pong.

When I was 18 I saw my first arcade pong game and I was curious as to how it worked. In 1975 (when I was 21) I played pong on a TV set and had the same curiosity.

What put me over the edge was 1977 (at age 23) when I saw an Atari 2600 and a TRS80. It's silly, but when the TRS80 said "Hi, what is your name?", I just had to know how it worked. That started me on a journey in the Air Force and trying to change my career field to programming. It took two years, but in late 1979 (at the age of 26) I finally got to switch to programming.

I learned a lot about how the Atari 2600 worked when I got my Atari 800. I have recently been satisfying my thirst for more detailed knowledge about the 2600 thanks to the tremendous amount of information available and the quality of the current crop of Atari 2600 emulators. I have a lot of respect for those first game programmers.

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I was working too many hours a week.

I had, at that time, been in the Dry Cleaning business for 15 years. I got tired of working 80-100 hours a week. I was just learning about something called the "internet". It facinated me. I started out slowly, teaching myself some basic HTML. I got a WROX book on HTML and taught myself (with the aid of FrontPage..ugh) how to build some basic websites. Through a friend of mine, I got a few small jobs to build some web sites for him. At this point I was totally burned out with the Dry Cleaning business and decided to get into "programming".

I made up a resume that stretched the truth a bit and landed my first job in programming. It required me to know something called "ASP". Another WROX book and a week later I was programming.

It is funny, I left one job because of the long hours just to have it replaced with another.

However, I love programming and wouldn't trade this job for anything...except maybe a winning lottery ticket.

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Because coding reaches the parts of my brain that other jobs didn't.

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Because I love programming.

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Because programming on the ZX Spectrum was much more fun than playing games on it! ;)

The thing was standing there as my father had bought it to type his thesis on it (really!) and I wanted to do something - anything - with it, too (I was 8). Gaming really wasn't an option (though I did keep trying) due to the shoddy graphics and sound and the fact that there weren't really any games for the Speccy that you could buy in Germany. But its BASIC dialect was actually superb (not that I had anything to compare it to when I started). The fact alone that the line number argument for the GOSUB statement was just another integer and could thus receive any old variable rather than hard-coded numbers opened up whole new avenues of code-reuse... ;)

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I started on the ZX Spectrum and started coding the games that came in Spectrum Magazine. It started a whole lifetime of playing and being obsessed with computers and coding (and games ;))

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I just loved that there was a way for me to combine logical thinking, creativity and the artistic side of producing smart, clean and well formated code.

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because my talent as a footballer wasn't spotted

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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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It was a more intellectually stimulating that repairing computers.

And the chicks, definately for the chicks

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

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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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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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I have no idea. It just worked out.

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

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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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10 PRINT "BECAUSE ITS COOL" 
20 GOTO 10

(Not tested)

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OMG he used GOTO - watch out for the velociraptor!! – Hannson Jun 18 at 1:08
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