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  3. Why did you became programmers?

Why did you became programmers?

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  • M Michael Sernal

    Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

    P Offline
    P Offline
    Pete OHanlon
    wrote on last edited by
    #30

    I did it for the chicks. Why else would you do it?

    *pre-emptive celebratory nipple tassle jiggle* - Sean Ewington

    "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

    CodeStash - Online Snippet Management | My blog | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier

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    • M Michael Sernal

      Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

      S Offline
      S Offline
      S Houghtelin
      wrote on last edited by
      #31

      I kind of fell into it. My background was in electronics and we needed to know assembly to troubleshoot the computers back when it was cost effective to do so. The real reason I got into programming was that when I was a lead tech on the production floor part of my duties were to inventory the new builds and returned products and provide throughput results. This consisted of manually counting the devices, writing the numbers down, entering the info into an Excel spread sheet so some office clerk could manually enter the data into Access to make a nice chart. This effort took a day a half to complete which took time from doing what I wanted to do. So I created a few macros in Access that automated most of the work and created the nice chart with just a few clicks. The inventory process took only an hour to do after that. They gave me a bonus check for $2000. I thought wow! All I did was knock out a few lines of code, wrapped in nice looking windows forms and they gave me 2 Grand… Sweet! I was hooked. I never looked back.

      It was broke, so I fixed it.

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      • L Lost User

        Quote:

        This saying is really only used by well educated and intelligent individuals.

        Nice!

        C Offline
        C Offline
        Chris Maunder
        wrote on last edited by
        #32

        I love the honesty and integrity of community sourced material.

        cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

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        • M Michael Sernal

          Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

          R Offline
          R Offline
          Roger Wright
          wrote on last edited by
          #33

          When I was young and in grade school we had these things called, "pencils," and used them, along with some cleverly flattened dead tree bits, to accomplish calculations. Later, in college, we had this thing called a "computer" on campus, attended by High Priests in white coats, all kept behind glass walls and unreachable by mortals except via more bits of flattened dead tree bits, punched full of holes, and neatly collected into ordered decks. These we slid through slots next to the glass walls in the vain hope that the Priests would submit them to the computer for its consideration at some time before the semester ended. It was considerably faster and more convenient to solve whatever silly problem we had with pencils and flat tree bits, but our teachers felt we should use the latest technology, whether it made sense to do so or not. Somewhere along the career path, while I was happily solving major technical problems with bits of silicon and germanium, some ninny decided to make them programmable, and that's when things went downhill. Everything I built had to be made to solve problems nobody had, and so had to be programmable, just in case that problem ever happened and needed a program change. Years went by, and things only got worse until everything became programmable, and people became so stupid that no one knew anymore how to work out a problem using a pencil and cleverly flattened dead tree bits. Somewhere in there I learned to program, but as far as I can recall, I never "decided to become" a programmer; it just grew on me, like a nasty tumor or a happily feasting tick. Once my professional skills led to the downfall of the nefarious USSR, I arranged to have myself laid off so that I would never have to program anything at all, but alas, even the local hardware store where I suffered dire underemployment for years and years had those damned computers, and they needed programming. Of course, now that almost nobody remembers how to solve anything without a computer, I and my pencil are kept happily entertained solving problems programmers cause for other people. It's not a bad life... :-D

          Will Rogers never met me.

          G 1 Reply Last reply
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          • M Michael Sernal

            Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

            R Offline
            R Offline
            Ravi Bhavnani
            wrote on last edited by
            #34

            > Why did you became programmers? Quite by chance. I was studying Electrical Engineering and had to take a Programming 101 course as a pre-requisite to Numerical Analysis.  My math prof told me, "Go take a course in Fortran."  When I went to the CS department to sign up, they laughed at me and said, "Fortran is obsolete - we teach structured programming here.  Sign up for Pascal 101."  (Please don't laugh - this was 32 years ago). So here I was, a grad student with stubble amidst a sea of freshmen, when the instructor walked into the class and on day 1 ordered us to "empty your minds, for I am about to teach you how to think".  It was love at first sight (with CS, not the instructor) and I've never looked back. Today, I write code for a living, then come home and write code for myself.  I spend most of my weekends writing code and building and maintaining my freeware apps.  Building software is all I ever want to do in life. :cool: /ravi

            My new year resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Articles | My .NET bits | Freeware ravib(at)ravib(dot)com

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            • M Michael Sernal

              Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

              X Offline
              X Offline
              xExTxCx
              wrote on last edited by
              #35

              IT was a backup plan. Physics/Astronomy was my original goal... Took a job in IT and have been in the field since.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • M Michael Sernal

                Hi guys, When you will still young like in grade school or earlier, did you already know that you would take a career in IT? Or do you have other dreams and it just happened that you would like to know how the computer works and stuff and ended up taking up a degree in IT?

                L Offline
                L Offline
                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #36

                My father was a lecturer in cybernetics, so I was lucky enough to actually have a computer and robots at home in the days before most people knew what one was, and feared the other. Taught by self Basic on the commodore PET , then6502 assembler. Wrote a version of missile command on the PET (a challenge on a non-bit mapped screen, I can tell you!) when I left school there were only 3 universities I the uk doing comp sci courses - I ended up joining the Metropolitan Police as a trainee programmer - much better than being a poor student as they trained me to code while paying me and providing accommodation and the best bacon rolls on the planet. The rest, as they say, is history. Some may say 'ancient history'

                MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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                • T Tim Corey

                  I did it for the opportunity to meet women. :laugh: Actually, I knew I wanted to be a programmer since I wrote my first "app" in BASIC. At the time, I thought I would only ever be able to do it as a hobby. Once I figured out someone would pay me to do it, I never looked back.

                  V Offline
                  V Offline
                  Vivi Chellappa
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #37

                  Tim Corey wrote:

                  I did it for the opportunity to meet women. :laugh:

                  There is a Doonesbury cartoon for that. PS. Actually, it a computer operator's job, not a programmer's.

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                  • C Chris Maunder

                    Because I'm a control freak who reckoned he could do it better than the IT department where I was doing grad work. Turns out I was right :D

                    cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                    G Offline
                    G Offline
                    Gary R Wheeler
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #38

                    I thought it was your prediliction for supervising machines powered by small, voracious rodents?

                    Software Zen: delete this;

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • R Roger Wright

                      When I was young and in grade school we had these things called, "pencils," and used them, along with some cleverly flattened dead tree bits, to accomplish calculations. Later, in college, we had this thing called a "computer" on campus, attended by High Priests in white coats, all kept behind glass walls and unreachable by mortals except via more bits of flattened dead tree bits, punched full of holes, and neatly collected into ordered decks. These we slid through slots next to the glass walls in the vain hope that the Priests would submit them to the computer for its consideration at some time before the semester ended. It was considerably faster and more convenient to solve whatever silly problem we had with pencils and flat tree bits, but our teachers felt we should use the latest technology, whether it made sense to do so or not. Somewhere along the career path, while I was happily solving major technical problems with bits of silicon and germanium, some ninny decided to make them programmable, and that's when things went downhill. Everything I built had to be made to solve problems nobody had, and so had to be programmable, just in case that problem ever happened and needed a program change. Years went by, and things only got worse until everything became programmable, and people became so stupid that no one knew anymore how to work out a problem using a pencil and cleverly flattened dead tree bits. Somewhere in there I learned to program, but as far as I can recall, I never "decided to become" a programmer; it just grew on me, like a nasty tumor or a happily feasting tick. Once my professional skills led to the downfall of the nefarious USSR, I arranged to have myself laid off so that I would never have to program anything at all, but alas, even the local hardware store where I suffered dire underemployment for years and years had those damned computers, and they needed programming. Of course, now that almost nobody remembers how to solve anything without a computer, I and my pencil are kept happily entertained solving problems programmers cause for other people. It's not a bad life... :-D

                      Will Rogers never met me.

                      G Offline
                      G Offline
                      Gary R Wheeler
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #39

                      Great post, Roger. One question: what's a tree?

                      Software Zen: delete this;

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