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  3. What is your WHY in CODING?

What is your WHY in CODING?

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  • R Randy Ga

    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.

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    tharkaway
    wrote on last edited by
    #50

    I learned to program on a HP 2115 minicomputer whose primary IO methods were paper tape and a teletype. One evening while trying to get something to work, I typed "why" at the command prompt. The computer replied "Why not". Since HP published the source code for the basic OS (HP Assembly Language), I dove in to see if I could find where "why" was being parsed as a legal command. As I remember, it was very well obfuscated using octal constants for both data and executable code. I guess I'll have to go with the HP2115's answer to the question Why? Why not!

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    • R Randy Ga

      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.

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      UncleBuckFever
      wrote on last edited by
      #51

      In 1978 at college I made my first contact with a computer and programming language, BASIC. I didn't get it, failed. Then in 1980 at a different college I took a FORTRAN class, got the technical aspect of it, aced all the tests, but had to use punch cards to produce programs, which was a pain, so I 'borrowed' punch card stacks. Again, didn't really get into the whole computer and programming thing. Jump forward to 1986, after changing schools again and changing majors from Aeronautical Engineering to Electrical Engineering to Architecture to Art to Forestry then to Jewery/Silversmithing, thru a few part time jobs, in and out of college then back in, I came to the realization that my brother graduated in CompSci and was making good coin. So my whole reasoning for jumping back into CompSci/programming was "If my brother can do it and make money then I can to." No other reason. So I reluctantly jumped back in, had courses in BASIC, Pascal, Assembler on DEC-PDP11 w/ giant floppy disks, C, but what really REALLY hooked me was a graphics class using Turbo Pascal on a PC. I could visibly see results from my coding efforts. So after 10 years of wandering the planet I finally graduated in 1988 in CompSci, and now 30 years later, I still code C/C++, creating data entry tools that generate code for others so they don't have to. Which is really sad they miss out on programming but that's a whole new topic...

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      • R Randy Ga

        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.

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        Harrison Pratt
        wrote on last edited by
        #52

        Apple ][ with Apple BASIC -- Why? Because there were almost no useful programs then; it was the pre-VisiCalc era. Then I added a CPM card and a roaring-loud hard disk drive the size of a shoe box. Followed that with Compaq PC, Borland's Turbo Pascal and Turbo Prolog.

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        • R Randy Ga

          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.

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          Ed59
          wrote on last edited by
          #53

          I was stationed in Italy from 86 to 90 (Vicenza, airborne infantry) when I found Tandy computers at the PX. I bought one with two floppy drives and the disk had gwbasic on it. I started messing around with it and reading everything I could about working with computers and programming. I haven't stopped yet. Being able to get the computer to do something makes it worthwhile.

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          • T Tomaz Stih 0

            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:

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            Steven1218
            wrote on last edited by
            #54

            We are indeed privileged. I look forward to working, and like others have said I am amazed I get to be paid (well) for it too.

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            • M Mycroft Holmes

              I remember the Kaypro!

              Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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              Richard Andrew x64
              wrote on last edited by
              #55

              Mycroft Holmes wrote:

              Kaypro

              Yes! And the Osborne!

              The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

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              • R Randy Ga

                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.

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                sasadler
                wrote on last edited by
                #56

                I was in college to become an EE (back in the 70s) and came across Byte magazine. Started reading about these new things call microprocessors and decided I could build a board with one of these, so I did (with a z80 processor). It was finished the day after my last final senior year. All I did for the next 3 weeks (until the start of my new job) was learn to program it. I had a whole 4K of RAM and a 2K EPROM containing the Zapple monitor program. There was no programming language so I was programming machine code by the numbers, poking values into memory, executing code at specified address, dump memory, etc. It was fascinating! At the new job, they were just starting to design a microprocessor base (Motorola 6800) smoke detector tester/calibrator. When they found out I had a computer at home, they asked me if I wanted to work on that project (of freaking course!!). I've been designing/programming ever since, mostly embedded systems.

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                • P phil o

                  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

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                  PNutHed
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #57

                  That's it. Was trying to find the words and you nailed it. I have a similar story at about the same time. Mine though had to do with the TRS-80, a model III mind you (CLOAD, baby!). Writing code is just awesome.

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                  • M Mycroft Holmes

                    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

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                    RickZeeland
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #58

                    This might be of interest to you: The Official C64 website – The World’s Best-selling Home Computer – Reborn![^]

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                    • R Randy Ga

                      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.

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                      patbob
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #59

                      I taught myself BASIC from a book my dad had on Dartmouth Basic back in 1978. Why? Why do you do anything when you're 14 -- because I wanted to.

                      I live in Oregon, and I'm an engineer.

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                      • R Randy Ga

                        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.

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                        willichan
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #60

                        My first coding was was in 1981 when some office donated a boatload of Commodore Pet 2001 Series computers to the school district I was in. My middle school math teacher ended up with them in his room, and offered to stay an extra hour after school every day to give anyone access to them that wanted it, in exchange for $20 a head, while letting us all know he knew nothing about them. One of my friends manages to get his hands on a manual from his dad's office, and we all started teaching ourselves Commodore Basic. The next year, we all signed up for the "all new" computer class at the High School. They didn't really teach us anything. The teacher just came in and told us to do whatever we wanted, as long as we each turned in one "educational game/program" each quarter that could be handed over to the grade schools in the district so they could do something with the donated computers. My Sophomore year, I consulted for the district to put their 5x7 index card attendance system into a database program. They bought the database program, and I designed the system (with its amazing 5.24" floppy based data transfer system) and trained all of the attendance secretaries in the district on how to use it. That was also when I learned the value of getting signed contracts before doing any work. :mad::mad: They originally promised me $2000 for the job, but when everything was done, they told me that as a government entity they could not legally pay money to a minor as an independent contractor, but would make sure that I received an A grade in the computer class as compensation for my efforts (as if I wasn't already getting one). Lesson learned. Money makes the world go round ... but documentation moves the money.

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                        • R Randy Ga

                          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.

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                          Leng Vang
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #61

                          You mean something like: y:=0; y=0; y<-0 set 0 as y Y is in there somewhere. Oh something else. I start in 1983 in High School with an Apple IIe. From there onto Pascal, C, C++, FORTRAN, Lisp, Java, VB.NET, C#, SQL, JavaScript, Python and the list goes on. Of all the WHY in CODING: WHY: FORTRAN code must start on specific column (older one). WHY: VB.NET required _ for line break. WHY: Python code blocks by indentation. WHY: JavaScript "this" is the most confusion of all.

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                          • R Randy Ga

                            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.

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                            Orval Hart
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #62

                            I took a programming class at Cal Poly when they got their 1st computer (1964-an IBM 1620 w/20K BCD bytes memory), and I got hooked (there was no way I was going to make a living as a Math major). Fortran II and assembly (I still have the instruction set manual-it was small). If you put a handheld radio up next to the console and ran a particular program, it would play 'Flight of the Bumble Bee'. :-)

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                            • R Randy Ga

                              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.

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                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #63

                              I didn't want to work outside. Long ago. Still don't; unless it's warm.

                              "(I) am amazed to see myself here rather than there ... now rather than then". ― Blaise Pascal

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                              • Z ZurdoDev

                                Randy Ga wrote:

                                When did you first learn to code and why?

                                Back in the early 90s, I took a computer class in High School because I knew computers would become a big thing and I thought it would be good to help me get into college. It turns out it was a Pascal Programming class and for the first 3 weeks the computers weren't ready so we did everything on the whiteboard. I was so lost and confused, I had no clue what we were doing. Nothing made sense at all. Once the computers were ready and I saw the Pascal compiler and where we were typing in the commands, it all made sense and I've been doing programming ever since.

                                Everyone is born right handed. Only the strongest overcome it. Fight for left-handed rights and hand equality.

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                                Alan Burkhart
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #64

                                In the early 80s I just wanted to try something new and via a family member I had an opportunity to try my hand at coding. Over time I learned BASIC (of course), then came writing glossaries for the Wang OIS[^] (you're really old if you remember Wang), Lotus 123 macros and dBase II. Made some money, had some fun, but eventually grew tired of being in an office all day and went back to trucking. Nowadays I just write apps for my own use or the occasional CP article.

                                Sometimes the true reward for completing a task is not the money, but instead the satisfaction of a job well done. But it's usually the money.

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                                • P phil o

                                  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

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                                  Alan Burkhart
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #65

                                  I had a 99. Still have the BASIC manual as a keepsake. In its day it was a great gaming machine.

                                  Sometimes the true reward for completing a task is not the money, but instead the satisfaction of a job well done. But it's usually the money.

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                                  • R RickZeeland

                                    This might be of interest to you: The Official C64 website – The World’s Best-selling Home Computer – Reborn![^]

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                                    Alan Burkhart
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #66

                                    RickZeeland wrote:

                                    The Official C64 website – The World’s Best-selling Home Computer – Reborn![^]

                                    Noticed in the fine print that the keyboard is nonfunctional, but you can add a USB keyboard.

                                    Sometimes the true reward for completing a task is not the money, but instead the satisfaction of a job well done. But it's usually the money.

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                                    • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                                      OriginalGriff wrote:

                                      with no heavy lifting

                                      Unless you had one of those "boat anchor" portable computers. :)

                                      The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

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                                      Alan Burkhart
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #67

                                      The Osborn was portable. If you had a forklift. :-D

                                      Sometimes the true reward for completing a task is not the money, but instead the satisfaction of a job well done. But it's usually the money.

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                                      • A Alan Burkhart

                                        RickZeeland wrote:

                                        The Official C64 website – The World’s Best-selling Home Computer – Reborn![^]

                                        Noticed in the fine print that the keyboard is nonfunctional, but you can add a USB keyboard.

                                        Sometimes the true reward for completing a task is not the money, but instead the satisfaction of a job well done. But it's usually the money.

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                                        RickZeeland
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #68

                                        Guess that's why I never had a Commodore :-\

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                                        • R Randy Ga

                                          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.

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                                          bryanren
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #69

                                          At the right age, I got to hear my father on the phone talking to an operator. Changing cards (JCL) in a deck to rerun a job that had thrown a OC7, and that he would be on his way back in. Oh, the mind puzzle. In high school, 1980, we had an IBM 127 card punch. Our teacher would take our deck to the local community college and bring back the green-bar. We were NOT to: 10 I = 1, 20 PRINT I, 30 I = I + 1, 40 GOTO 10. And yet, someone in the class did. I would love to have seen the operator kill that job. Why? Puzzles. From both sides - user wants to do what? ok, now how do I get it to do that. And the world keeps turning, the technology changing

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