What is your WHY in CODING?
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
Money.
-
I went the same path but started with a commodore 64 and went via SuperBase before I got into VB.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH
SuperBase rings a bell with me, I had that on my Atari 1040ST but never did anything useful with it. Later on I thought DbaseIII+ was more interesting because of job opportunities, and to my amazement I got a job as a database programmer pretty quick !
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
Because I needed a job and there was good money to be made in IT :laugh: I actually learned on the job (and in my spare time after I got my first job). I liked it, it kind of stuck, and I've been doing it happily ever after ;)
Best, Sander Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming in C# Succinctly
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
The year was 1992. It was DOS on a IBM386. My dad was a programmer back then, so I learned a few nifty things using his class notes...I ended up studying it in college after my hopes to pursue a career in aviation got crushed. But hey, 10 years into doing this for a living, no regrets! WHY? Because this world needs more people doing good things to make a difference. :cool:
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
It was year 1999. There was huge incentive before Y2K and market was prospering and shedding money who could code HTML. But to make my fundamentals strong I started with C language and fell in love with it. I then wrote code in C, C#, Java, JavaScript, Web languages and frameworks, windows app development and Silverlight, etc.
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code, // 99 bugs in the code // We fix a bug, compile it again // 101 little bugs in the code ♫
Tell your manager, while you code: "good, cheap or fast: pick two. "
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
1982. I was 10y old. In primary school. My neighbor got a British made ZX Spectrum microcomputer. I consider the day he brought it to my place the luckiest in my life. That night, knowing only five BASIC commands - LET, INPUT, PRINT, GOTO (yes!), and IF - I wrote my first code. On paper, using graphite pencil, of course. And I knew this was what I wanted to do. Why? Were you ever asked by your girlfriend or your wife (or both?) why you love her ( of course you were -- it's a standard let's have a fight trap ) Not an easy question to answer. I suppose it is the creation of new, the individual self- dependency, the freedom to do whatever you want and the responsibility to fix bugs, the adolescent loneliness, the instant gratification of software - simply a good match to our characters. Later in life I met a lot of people who never found themselves. Never knew what they want to do in life. It lead to realization of how lucky I was. Life gives you many boons and bones. But it's all easier if you have passion for your work. We, who do, are the lucky ones. We are the privileged few. :laugh: :java:
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
Back in 1976 I took a FORTRAN course at Georgia Tech. The first time I saw that I could make a machine do THAT the lid was off. I was hooked on it and still am.
If you think hiring a professional is expensive, wait until you hire an amateur! - Red Adair
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
1979 on Commodore PET 8k computers. Why? Because it was interesting. I went to college for computer science because I had no idea what else to do. Looks like it worked out for me. :-D
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
When: In 1980, our high school was picked as one of the 'test' high schools in the province to have computers: 3 Commodore PETS - 16K models. Pretty much self-taught on Commodore BASIC and then 6502 Assembler. Why: I had taken a data processing course before where we studied the history of computers, then, in the last term, we wrote programs using mark-sense cards. That peaked my interest. From there... it was college and over 30 years of professional work.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
I started in high school back in 1979 when I was a junior. We had three teletypes connected via modem (rotary dial phones and acoustic couplers) to the minicomputers across town at UND. The actual computers were a PDP-8 and a PDP-12 and we were learning BASIC. They wouldn't let us save anything on the computers but the teletypes were able to punch holes in paper tapes and read them. In my senior year they actually got an Apple II. I spent a lot of time in the computer lab and found that I really liked working with the computers. After I graduated from high school we moved down to Florida and I went to college. I just really enjoyed working with computers and I was able to get paid doing it as well. It's always nice when you can get paid for doing something that you like doing.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
I saw a computer at a trade fair when I was a child and even it was green letters in black background I had it clear I loved that... I started at an academy when I was 9... since then I've never stopped. I started professionally at 1998 (some years before I did small jobs in different companies but the first serious thing was 1998). I specialized in the industrial/mechanical environment where robots and special machines live... :cool:
www.robotecnik.com[^] - robots, CNC and PLC programming
-
My first lines of codes were written in 1983 or 1984; at that time I had a Texas Instruments TI-99/4A computer, and the language was (extended) BASIC. Why? Because coding is just awesome :)
"I'm neither for nor against, on the contrary." John Middle
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
I started learning to code in 1977, when my stepfather bought a COSMAC ELF[^] single-board computer. It ran a 6502 processor with 2K of RAM. Our ELF was a deluxe model, and included a hex keypad for program entry. We found a Tiny BASIC interpreter that only took 1.5K of RAM. Adding a KSR-33 teletype gave us text I/O, and we were in business. I learned BASIC and wrote a lot of programs on that thing. For the "WHY", we have to go back a lot further to the early 60's. We always watched the Gemini and Apollo launches. While the launch itself was great, I was mainly fascinated by the control room video and the idea that such machines were controlled by people pushing buttons on a panel. I eventually learned about computers being at the heart of things, and it's been all downhill ever since :-D.
Software Zen:
delete this;
-
Yup. I'm with you, Phil. I played around with a Timex Sinclair a little before that. Being able to build things was the hook that got me.
Around these years there was a publication dedicated to computer code called Hebdogiciel. In it you could find codes for various computer systems like HP41, PC 1251, PC1500, TRS 80, Thomson TO7/MO8, MZ 80, TI-99/4A, Apple IIc/e, ZX 81, Sinclair, Spectrum, Commodore, ORIC 1/ ATMOS, Alice, Atari 520/1024 ST, and I surely forgot some. All these names still ring the bell of nostalgia to me.
"I'm neither for nor against, on the contrary." John Middle
-
Yup. I'm with you, Phil. I played around with a Timex Sinclair a little before that. Being able to build things was the hook that got me.
Here a small sample code for SPECTRUM found in my archives:
1 REM **MUSHROOM** SPECTRUM 48K: REM PE et H CELLARD:
2 GO SUB 800: LET ba=0
3 DIM h$(5,3): FOR x=1 TO 5: LET h$(x)="AAA": NEXT x
4 DIM h(5): LET hsc=10: FOR x=1 TO 5: LET h(x)=0: NEXT X
5 BORDER 1: LET a$="A": LET c$=" "
6 LET t=15: LET pa=3: LET te=.4: LET b$="I": LET ni=0
..."I'm neither for nor against, on the contrary." John Middle
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
1980, Commodore 64s and a TRaSh-80 in math class, 11th grade. It was fun. Wrote an Asteroids style game on the 64. It was crude and sooooo slooooow but cheaper than 25 cents for the real thing! Now I do programming for the money and it's still fairly fun. Outside of work, I don't much like computers.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
About 1975 and I thought it would be a useful skill as computers were going to be everywhere. Started on a dial up to the local university, with BASIC. My school had a teletype that we used to communicate with the HP mini at the OU. Later we built a Nascom.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
-
When did you first learn to code and why? I learned in 2012 and my WHY is to hopefully be successful one day in helping millions.
When I give a computer something it doesn't like, it tells me clearly and plainly what I did wrong, and when I fix it, it doesn't hold a grudge. I'm (a bit) autistic, so this is the only time I _really_ feel like I have some sort of connection with something.