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I'm self-taught. Learned programming at the kitchen table on my laptop at night after work.

I started out at work doing some really complex things in Excel. That lead to VBA. I had so much fun with that; it was way more fun than my real job. I was able to use programming to solve a real business problem.

That was in the late 1990's, when pretty much anybody could get a job as a programmer because there was such a shortage, especially web developers. I didn't get into web development right away. Started with VB4. Got the Sam's book Learn Visual Basic in 20 Days and worked through it. Discovered that VB5 was already out, so I learned that. Just when VB6 came out, I picked that up and got Microsoft certification in it.

I had plenty of business experience, but no full-time programming experience. I managed to get a job as a junior newbie programmer with a software development firm. Gave up the big office, the salary and bonus, the suits. The really big deal was going from being an experienced professional to a n00b who was much older than my peers. But I ate it up. Ten years later, I've worked my way up to senior web developer, doing mostly C#. Still loving my work. I'm still studying at home all the time. Including right now, while everybody else is watching football.

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I'm self-taught. Learned programming at the kitchen table on my laptop at night after work.

I started out at work doing some really complex things in Excel. That lead to VBA. I had so much fun with that; it was way more fun than my real job. I was able to use programming to solve a real business problem.

That was in the late 1990's, when pretty much anybody could get a job as a programmer because there was such a shortage, especially web developers. I didn't get into web development right away. Started with VB4. Got the Sam's book Learn Visual Basic in 20 Days and worked through it. Discovered that VB5 was already out, so I learned that. Just when VB6 came out, I picked that up and got Microsoft certification in it.

I had plenty of business experience, but no full-time programming experience. I managed to get a job as a junior newbie programmer with a software development firm. Gave up the big office, the salary and bonus, the suits. The really big deal was going from being an experienced professional to a n00b who was much older than my peers. But I ate it up. Ten years later, I've worked my way up to senior web developer. Still loving my work. I'm still studying at home all the time. Including right now, while everybody else is watching football.