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Thanks! I must have missed it.
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You didn't "miss" it - the CSS for it was poorly designed. Links are not sufficiently colored any more with the new layout.
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Yup, i had to look many times to realize, that there was a link in this sentence
For the sake of the survey we'll use this list as our Top 20
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No Commodore 64 for me like most of you guys!
Got it when I was around 8 and learned BASIC from the commands on the last page of the manual
Almost 30 years later I still code and keep thinking what on earth made me like these machines so much... oh well, maybe is as innate for me as loving women!
Cheers!
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Another Sinclair fan here - I started with ZX Spectrum 48k. Hey, it had whole 48 kilobytes of RAM, 16 Kb of ROM and the CPU (Z80A) was running at almost 4 MHz. What a machine
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Amazing how we had so much fun with so less power.
In fact, if we speak about games, I can't remember having as much fun with these super productions as I had with BombJack, Rick Dangerous, Chuckie Egg, Target Renegade!!
Oh well...
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Must of been the first for me.
Writing menu's in batch before windows 3.1 days...
I can remember that the pc came out with batch menu file (with help) that you had to edit if you wanted to add menu items/ remove menu items ect.
E.g.
MAIN MENU:
1) Utilities
2) Games Menu
3) Exit
"Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence."
<< please vote!! >>
modified 1-Oct-12 7:12am.
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Time for some of Nagy's mind bleach .
Software Zen: delete this;
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yes, BASIC is my first, then to Visual Basic. Now in C#
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C
C++
VB
VB.NET
ASP.NET
C#, C#. . . never ending. .
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as in, I pulled these stats out of my butt.
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Slacker007 wrote: I pulled these stats out of my butt Aren't they all?
Ranking language use by number of search engine queries isn't any less valuable than any other metric (like lines of code, for example). Conversely, I don't know that it tells you anything genuinely useful. I certainly wouldn't choose a language for a project based on this information.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I remember seeing a list obtained from job postings, that would seem to be a more accurate measure of getting the most popular language
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6502 assembly came first, the hard way: I had to type in all the hex codes for the various instructions myself.
No convenient address labels to jump to: work out the hex target address by yourself if you want to jump anywhere.
Its 32 years ago by now so I guess the message title is right to a degree. Still: learning the hard way sure makes you learn the basics right enough.
6502 assembly, Basic, Fortran, Pascal, Forth, 8051 assembly, PLM/51, C, Visual Basic, powerbuilder, T-SQL, ... and whatever come along in the future
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I must be getting old to...
I started learning on a RadioShack kit... until my father allowed me to work with the TRS-80 Model I.
Then, Assembly, BASIC (also referred to as QBASIC at some point), Fortran, Pascal, C, C++, ...
Still dabble in Assembly from time to time; though it is for the ARM processor now. C/C++ is the primary language.
Processors .... that is another story. I've worked with far too many to really keep this message short.
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I started with BASIC on a Commodore 64, immediately followed by 6502 Assembler to extend BASIC
Regards
Thomas
Disclaimer: Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you.
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It was COBOL...
The first language they taught you on my Uni course was Cobol. On punched cards.
And the second was Fortran.
When you got to year 2, they started on "languages with curly brackets in" and taught you ALGOL. Which had no curly brackets in. Then Pascal, which didn't either.
There are times when I wonder why I went on that course...
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
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Welcome to the 'hood, geezer.
FORTRAN was my first language, BASIC a close second. My early languages also included IBM 370 assembly, 8085 assembly, and PL/I.
Software Zen: delete this;
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PDP 8 was my first assembler, then Z80 (which I then kept coming back to / being forced back to for the next 25 years in it's 64180/Z180 guise)
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
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My first boss had a couple home-built PDP-8's. AFAIK they're still in working order.
I never did a lot of Z80, mostly 8080/8085 and then 8086.
Software Zen: delete this;
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next Pascal....
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First started with Commodore BASIC.
And still write in Commodore BASIC...
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C64 for teh win
(yes|no|maybe)*
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CBM Programming Studio rules!
Did not know it until now. Will certainly use it!
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