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The First Program You Ever Wrote

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  • R ra ra ra ra

    on the good ole spectrum 48k 10 Print "Hello World" 20 Goto 10 think thats the right syntax! :rolleyes:

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Ray Kinsella
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    you and me both brother .... :-D

    Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch

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    • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

      Tax = Round(Price * TaxFactor, 2) - Price Your app reengineered. Mwahahah!

      -- Mit viel Oktan und frei von Blei, eine Kraftstoff wie Benziiiiiiin!

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      homegrown
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      :omg: i think i only discovered the ability to round two classes later :laugh:

      :: have the courage to use your own reason

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      • H homegrown

        just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

        :: have the courage to use your own reason

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        C Offline
        coolestCoder
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        My first program was a QBASIC program which played the indian national antheme. ( the secret is that i copied it from somewhere and just runned it ) But what a feeling that time ! I was on the moon when it completed successfully !!:-D


        "A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street." -- Doug Linder


        Anant Y. Kulkarni

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        • R ra ra ra ra

          on the good ole spectrum 48k 10 Print "Hello World" 20 Goto 10 think thats the right syntax! :rolleyes:

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          hairy_hats
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          So it wasn't just me fiddling with Speccies in WH Smiths then!

          Asynes yw brassa ages kwilkynyow.

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          • J J4amieC

            I used to copy Basic programs out of magazines with my dad into an Acorn Electron (evil twin of the BBC Basic). This was circa 1985. Those things were thousands of lines long with no debugger - if it didnt run it was a case of scanning through line for line to try to spot the typo. Occasionaly the magazine itself would contain a typo - those were the REALLY fun ones.

            --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

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            ra ra ra ra
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            Ya I started with those as well , The mags I used where called 'INPUT' and you could be certain that if he program was more than 5 lines long, it wouldn't work. Me and my brother would spend hours typing them in on the ZX spectrum (not easy as half rubber keys had rubbed off from playing games) to find they wouldn't work. Then spend ages trying to find a typo. Only to find out in another 5 issues time that yes they had got it wrong and they published some 'errata' to correct the program. :mad: the errata corrections never worked either though!! grrrrrrr was a frustrating time, and hasn't got that much better over the years!!

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            • H homegrown

              just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

              :: have the courage to use your own reason

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              A Offline
              Alsvha
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              Can't remember, to many years ago, but it was in Comal 80.

              --------------------------- 127.0.0.1 - Sweet 127.0.0.1

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              • H homegrown

                just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                :: have the courage to use your own reason

                B Offline
                B Offline
                benjymous
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                On the Tandy TRS80 my dad recovered from a skip when his University was having a clearout - I think it was something along the lines of: 10 PRINT "HELLO RICHARD" 20 GOTO 10 Then (with lots of help from my Dad) we made some kind of snow program, with white asterisks falling down the screen. The TRS80 was incredibly limited to what you could actually do - it had no graphics, just upper case characters and punctuation.

                -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit! Buzzwords!

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                • C coolestCoder

                  My first program was a QBASIC program which played the indian national antheme. ( the secret is that i copied it from somewhere and just runned it ) But what a feeling that time ! I was on the moon when it completed successfully !!:-D


                  "A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street." -- Doug Linder


                  Anant Y. Kulkarni

                  _ Offline
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                  _AK_
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Anant Y. Kulkarni wrote:

                  ( the secret is that i copied it from somewhere and just runned it )

                  Born programmer.. :)

                  Best Regards, Apurva Kaushal

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                  • A Anders Molin

                    Hmm, I don't really remember.. But, I got a ZX81 back in 1981 ;-) I still remember when I unpacked it and looked at the keyboard, and wondered about what all that "run", "goto" and other stuff did. When I got it hooked up to my parents TV, I thought I could use it as a calculator, so when I wrote "10+10=" it should show the result. The ZX 81 always started every line with a Basic keyword which was hardcoded to different keys on the keyboard so you didn't have to write them yourself. I pressed the key for "print" without knowing what it was supposed to do, and wrote "10+10=" and nothing happened. Hmmm :confused: Then I deleted the "=" and pressed enter, and huh! The TV actually showed "20" on the next line. After that I started to read the manual and a looong adventure into programming started. I know, not my first program, but related I think :)

                    - Anders My new photo website[^]

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                    Daniel Turini
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Anders Molin wrote:

                    ut, I got a ZX81 back in 1981 ;) I still remember when I unpacked it and looked at the keyboard, and wondered about what all that "run", "goto" and other stuff did.

                    Recently I used a ZX81 emulator coded in JavaScript (:omg:) and I was shocked that I still remember most of those keyboard commands (on the "K" cursor state): "J" for "LOAD", "L" for "LET", and so on.

                    I don't see dead pixels anymore... Yes, even I am blogging now!

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                    • H homegrown

                      just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                      :: have the courage to use your own reason

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                      M Offline
                      Marc Clifton
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      The first program I wrote that I remember was a text-based (teletype actually) Star Trek game on a PDP-11. 10x10 grid, your ship, phasers, photons, Romulan Neutral Zone, a couple planets to investigate, a space station to dock with. You basically had to wipe out the Romulans and save the planets, but some of them lurked hidden behind the neutral zone and you had to go hunt them down. Every turn reprinted the grid with updated positions and stats like shields, energy, etc. Let's see, that was in 8th grade, I think, over 30 years ago. Marc

                      Thyme In The Country

                      People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                      There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                      People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                      • H homegrown

                        just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                        :: have the courage to use your own reason

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                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Too long ago to remember exactly - probably something to perform some simple calculations in BBC Basic (around 1983/1984).

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                        • R ra ra ra ra

                          on the good ole spectrum 48k 10 Print "Hello World" 20 Goto 10 think thats the right syntax! :rolleyes:

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Ray Hayes
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          I'm sure I used to do something like PRINT "Hello ", or something else at the end of the line which resulted in the output going all over the screen rather than a column down the left. If I had more time, I put a loop in there and changed the foreground and background colours too!

                          Regards, Ray

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                          • H homegrown

                            just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                            :: have the courage to use your own reason

                            C Offline
                            C Offline
                            Chris Losinger
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            it was probably 10 PRINT "Yay "; 20 Goto 10 in BASIC, on a Commodore PET.

                            image processing | blogging

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                            • M Marc Clifton

                              The first program I wrote that I remember was a text-based (teletype actually) Star Trek game on a PDP-11. 10x10 grid, your ship, phasers, photons, Romulan Neutral Zone, a couple planets to investigate, a space station to dock with. You basically had to wipe out the Romulans and save the planets, but some of them lurked hidden behind the neutral zone and you had to go hunt them down. Every turn reprinted the grid with updated positions and stats like shields, energy, etc. Let's see, that was in 8th grade, I think, over 30 years ago. Marc

                              Thyme In The Country

                              People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                              There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                              People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                              H Offline
                              homegrown
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              ok.. that sounds just a *tad* more exciting than calculating tax.. but only *just* ;P

                              :: have the courage to use your own reason

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                              • C Chris Losinger

                                it was probably 10 PRINT "Yay "; 20 Goto 10 in BASIC, on a Commodore PET.

                                image processing | blogging

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                                H Offline
                                homegrown
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                i like your style.. "hello, world" it just so *ancient* imagine every framework/sdk/language littered with a plethora of "Yay" programs as part of their introduction.. :D

                                :: have the courage to use your own reason

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                                • R Ray Hayes

                                  I'm sure I used to do something like PRINT "Hello ", or something else at the end of the line which resulted in the output going all over the screen rather than a column down the left. If I had more time, I put a loop in there and changed the foreground and background colours too!

                                  Regards, Ray

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                                  A Offline
                                  Arjan Schouten
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  Yep, something with POKE 53280,X and POKE 53281,X on the C64 if I recall correct. ;)

                                  Arjan

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                                  • H homegrown

                                    just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                                    :: have the courage to use your own reason

                                    T Offline
                                    T Offline
                                    Tim Carmichael
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    My first 'application' was written on mark sense cards, in a pseudo-language... and I don't remember the name of it... (circa... 1980) In college (1982), we were asked to write an application in this 'language' that read in a deck of cards (number unknown) and print them in reverse order... the only way to complete the application was to have the program modify itself to change the index operator from 'add 1' to 'subtract 1'... I miss applications that can modify themselves... Tim

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                                    • H homegrown

                                      just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                                      :: have the courage to use your own reason

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      Roger Wright
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      My first wasn't really an application; today we'd call it a driver. My first computer didn't have any I/O, so I designed and built an interface card. Then I needed something to allow it to work, so I had to write the code to make the computer check it periodically for the presence of a data byte and do something with the data.

                                      "...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9

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                                      • B benjymous

                                        On the Tandy TRS80 my dad recovered from a skip when his University was having a clearout - I think it was something along the lines of: 10 PRINT "HELLO RICHARD" 20 GOTO 10 Then (with lots of help from my Dad) we made some kind of snow program, with white asterisks falling down the screen. The TRS80 was incredibly limited to what you could actually do - it had no graphics, just upper case characters and punctuation.

                                        -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit! Buzzwords!

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        jbarton
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        From what I remember, the TRS-80 had a very crude form of "graphics". While it really always stayed in text mode, 64 characters in the character set were special 3 high by 2 wide pixel characters. This allowed setting monochrome pixels on the screen (as long as they didn't overlap with where you wanted to put text). I think the text display was 80 by 24, which allowed for an effective graphics resolution of 160 by 72. I remember an early game called 'Android Nim' which used the crude graphics to display animation of Android characters which were destroyed as part of playing the game. The game itself was very simple, but it was fun to see animation on a TRS-80. I think that the source was printed in some magazine of the time (the late 70's). At the time, I had an Exidy Sorceror computer (another Z-80 based computer which also had Basic available). It didn't have the TRS-80 character set for graphics, but it did have a programmable character set (you could poke data into the character set for the top 128 characters). I ported a number of TRS-80 games to the Exidy (including Android Nim) by setting up the programmable characters with a character set similar to the TRS-80.

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                                        • H homegrown

                                          just thinking back between to the first time, and the very first program ever that i ever "wrote" was a DOS "application" [yes, it was called an application] that had to calculate tax [@ 14%]on any price you input. ANY price. ;P > Enter price: 10.00 Tax = 1.14 Total Price = 11.40 and it was sooo cool! nevermind it took me the best of three hours to write with borland c++ :D [and i copied half of it anyway cos i just didn't get what all the ;'s were doing there] the journey from that day to now... well, let's just say things are a little different- but programming still remains sooo cool. anyhoooo.. i was wondering just where/how did most programmers start out with their first ever "application"?

                                          :: have the courage to use your own reason

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          Matthew Bache
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          The first real (i.e. useful) program I wrote was at University. It was written in FORTRAN and processed data from a spectrometer for one of my projects. I forget the actual purpose of the project, but do remember finding programming more enjoyable than the physics I was meant to be doing! Even so, it took me 14 years to get around to doing more programming, when I finally embarked on the Computer Science course that led to my current career.

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