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Unread 06-04-2010, 16:06
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Re: How Did You Learn How To Program?

Before Last Year, i have never programmed any language in my life (except for HTML in 5th grade). There was a kid starting a robotics team at my school, and i thought it would be cool to sign up and build some robots. I signed up and there was no one to program the robot. I played around with LV a little bit, and a little bit more, until i logged about 100 hours of LV. After that, i learned C++, VB and Java. But as i have learned, you are NEVER done learning how to program, every time you drag that box, or write that next line of code, there is always much much more to learn, or at least, a different way to code what you just coded.
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Unread 06-04-2010, 16:08
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Re: How Did You Learn How To Program?

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Originally Posted by jmanela View Post
Before Last Year, i have never programmed any language in my life (except for HTML in 5th grade). There was a kid starting a robotics team at my school, and i thought it would be cool to sign up and build some robots. I signed up and there was no one to program the robot. I played around with LV a little bit, and a little bit more, until i logged about 100 hours of LV. After that, i learned C++, VB and Java. But as i have learned, you are NEVER done learning how to program, every time you drag that box, or write that next line of code, there is always much much more to learn, or at least, a different way to code what you just coded.
The last part is true, technology is evolving every day, you can even say programming is an art
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Unread 06-04-2010, 16:47
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Re: How Did You Learn How To Program?

My avatar is a Commodore PET 4032. 40 character wide screen... 32 kB of RAM. Made in Canada! You could get a floppy drive for them... but they cost a fortune. Mostly our programs were saved and loaded from audio cassette tapes. Type in "load", press "play" and wait five or ten minutes.

They cost a fair bit back in the '70's but our local high school had one and my Dad, a teacher there, could take turns taking it home on the weekend to learn how to use it. I'm not sure how many hours I spent down in the basement with a manual and computer magazines figuring out how to write code in BASIC.

There weren't many people around to teach programming, at least in northern BC, in those days, and there certainly was no internet to go to for advice.

But it was a fabulous time to learn programming because the expectations were so low. If you could make a COMPUTER do SOMETHING... ANYTHING... it was considered pretty impressive. If you could make it do what you wanted it to do, well... that was even better.

When Zork and Space Invaders were high tech, it wasn't too hard for one person, working alone in their basement, to come up with an impressive game or application.

That's why I like teaching programming using robots and microcontrollers. Most people have no preconceptions of what a robot or microcontroller should be able to do... so programming a $2.00 PIC to receive an IR remote control signal and drive a mini sumo robot is seen as "impressive", even though it is a reasonably simple task.

But regardless of the platform or language, there is no substitute for hours upon hours of creating, troubleshooting, modifying and debugging your own code.

Jason
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Unread 06-04-2010, 16:09
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Re: How Did You Learn How To Program?

Quote:
Originally Posted by jmanela View Post
Before Last Year, i have never programmed any language in my life (except for HTML in 5th grade). There was a kid starting a robotics team at my school, and i thought it would be cool to sign up and build some robots. I signed up and there was no one to program the robot. I played around with LV a little bit, and a little bit more, until i logged about 100 hours of LV. After that, i learned C++, VB and Java. But as i have learned, you are NEVER done learning how to program, every time you drag that box, or write that next line of code, there is always much much more to learn, or at least, a different way to code what you just coded.
Me and my dad have competitions to see who can write the best code It's amazing to see how many different ways to code something.
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