I started programming at age 13
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
5 years ago when i was 18 and starting uni. I didnt like coding at first and couldn't get on with it but in my placement year I ended up working for a company using c# asp.net and now here I am, almost 2years experience. Inferior experience to a lot of you I know. :)
The answers posted by me are suggestions only and cannot be used in anyway against me.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
At age
16
. I don't remember my first project, anyway the language was theZX Spectrum
'sBASIC
. :)If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles] -
I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
21 and I discovered that a string could be something entirely different than women's underwear... going down hill since then... :-D
V.
Stop smoking so you can: Enjoy longer the money you save. Moviereview Archive -
Age 4 in C64 basic. Later moved to AMOS on the Amiga, Visual Basic and eventually C and C++ when I was around 16 (in the case of Windows, Win32 API and several years later MFC). That was all self-taught then got to do pascal at college which I wasnt that keen on tbh, then java at university which I've also never used since. Now it's mostly .NET with C#. Despite the mostly basic background, I prefer the stricter nature of C# and the less verbose syntax to the modern versions of VB.
Crikey, my newborn is going to have to work hard to beat your age 4 starting date ;) So far she is more interested in spitting milk onto the keyboard than programming it.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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I used to mess around with Logo on my dads Amstrad cpw pcw. Big ugly thing with the disc drive mounted on the side of the (black and green) monitor. Was probably around 9-10ish. I then started exploring the OS (it was some variant of CP/M[^]) and messed around with the source code of a few of the games (in Basic I think, but I didn't know that at the time). It was around 11 where I really discovered it though on my schools BBC micro and a 'program your own space adventure games' book. I spent ages copying out the code, for it not to work and having to spend ages checking through the 50 line program for my mistakes. The first game I remember getting working was kind of a text only version of the classic gorillas[^] Later was given an Oric Atmos[^] which I continued with for a while.
Simon
modified on Tuesday, September 9, 2008 8:49 AM
I know which machine you mean - I had one while I was at Uni (mine was the turbocharged version with 1MB of RAM!). :-\ It was CP/M+, BTW. Fun system to learn on, aside from the mono monitor.
Anna :rose: Having a bad bug day? Tech Blog | Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "If mushy peas are the food of the devil, the stotty cake is the frisbee of God"
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
I started coding when I was at the university. My first real project was a Montne Carlo simulation written in Fortran. Prior to that I was just working on cheesy academic projects and games written in C/C++.
Sovereign ingredient for a happy marriage: Pay cash or do without. Interest charges not only eat up a household budget; awareness of debt eats up domestic felicity. --Lazarus Long
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Ohhhh! You had breakfast, you lucky thing you. We had to get up before we went to sleep, eat roadkill for lunch, set our selves on fire to guide the planes into Heathrow before climbing into the jet engines to clean them with our tongues! You had luxury you did!
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
I still haven't started programming and I'm 28...
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Crikey, my newborn is going to have to work hard to beat your age 4 starting date ;) So far she is more interested in spitting milk onto the keyboard than programming it.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
Unfortunately my child (age of 2 and half) is more interested in driving our car. :sigh: :)
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles] -
Pete O'Hanlon wrote:
Over 30 years ago.
You must be almost as old as me. I started programming in the mid 1970's. Thinking of retiring yet ????
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Thinking of retiring yet ????
There are a few years left in the old dog yet.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
I was 9 years old. I notice that too many people start when they leave school these days. That's sad.
Recent blog posts: *SQL Server / Visual Studio install order *Installing SQL Server 2005 on Vista *Crazy Extension Methods Redux * Mixins My Blog
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Unfortunately my child (age of 2 and half) is more interested in driving our car. :sigh: :)
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles]The next Dale Earnhardt or Michael Schumacher eh :-D
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
The first 'program' I wrote (if you call it a program) was when I was 7 in junior school, using a flowchart to control various motors and read from sensors etc... I believe the first build was a pedestrian crossing simulation. The first time I did some real programming was when I was 9 when I bought a PIC16F84 kit (I don't miss them at all) and made a light sequencer... the first time I actually used the PIC's machine code and wrote the .hex file directly. (Understandably I got a proper assembler soon after as the kit didn't contain one!) Then Delphi when I was 11, then C# at 13... my current choice.
Matthew Butler
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
I don't remember how old I was. We used LOGO in grade school. In high school I wrote a program in BASIC that drew a blueprint of the school and had a little sprite move through a roster of classes. Then it was C++ in senior year, followed by Java, .NET stuff, and C in college.
Have faith in yourself; amateurs built the Ark, professionals built the Titanic.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
About 27 or 28 years ago. TRS-80 Model I with the Expansion Interface. BASIC at first doing simple things, then Z80 Assembler. Hand assembled until I finally got the Macro Assembler package. One of the first hand assembled things I made was a quick-sort that worked with BASIC strings. I sold this to a number of people. Then on to fun stuff like a Space Invaders clone, Asteroids clone etc. all in Assembler. Ah, the good old days, when screens were small and colour meant flickering screen buffers to get different shades of grey. Cheers, Drew.
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I was in school and my first project was making a stop sign that light red, yellow, green. I was using PC LOGO When did you start programming? And what was your first project?
Worse yet - for one of my projects I hired one of the inventors of the LOGO language.
I am convinced that lobotomising users will make little to no difference.
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I was 9 years old. I notice that too many people start when they leave school these days. That's sad.
Recent blog posts: *SQL Server / Visual Studio install order *Installing SQL Server 2005 on Vista *Crazy Extension Methods Redux * Mixins My Blog
About the second question I ask in interviews is "When did you start programming?" and if I get back "Oh, in college" I know I'm in for a painful interview. Sometimes I am surprised but by in large people who choose programming as a career on entering college are not ready to programme (in the field I work in) when they leave college. They make good formal programmers for big corporates who need implementors but they don't make good free thinking programmers. (Clarification; we need all types. I'm just not hiring guys who are bound by what they were taught parrot fashion in college.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.