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

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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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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 have no idea. It just worked out.

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

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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'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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because my talent as a footballer wasn't spotted

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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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Because I love programming.

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

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

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

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Accidentally.

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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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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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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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4 characters - ZX81

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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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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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