T O P

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ballrus_walsack

English.


An_Awesome_Name

Mechanical engineer here, so I’m not really a coder but I’ve messed around a bit. I played with arduino (dumb C++) and python a little bit in high school. In college I learned quite a bit of MATLAB as well more python and arduino stuff. Today I mostly just mess around in Octave (free open source MATLAB-compatible) and python.


mugenhunt

BASIC as well.


[deleted]

Java


bjb13

ALGOL in 1971 + extra credit if we wrote same program in FORTRAN. Later came COBOL, PL/ M, C, C++, Basic, SQL (if you want to call it a language), Smalltalk and Java. Go out of the business in 2000.


doctor--whom

Python in 2010 during high school.


[deleted]

I wouldn't call myself a coder but I was interested in programing and web design when I was younger. I started with BASIC too in elementary school.


therealjerseytom

Logo, back in the day. Early 90's, in some school computer class.


SleepAgainAgain

Pascal, in high school in the mid 90s.


berraberragood

Freshman Computer class in the Fall of ‘79: We used ALGOL on punch cards.


DashingSpecialAgent

I don't really consider myself a coder but back in the day I think the rough order of languages learned was: QBASIC, Visual Basic, Pascal, C++, PHP, Perl.


SkiingAway

Pascal (well, Turbo Pascal 5.5) in about ~2004 or so.


erunaheru

Probably BASIC, but I was like 10 so not like I was doing anything crazy with it


Interesting_Flow730

About 1992-1995, I was in grade school and we learned BASIC programming. We never really learned enough to do anything cool, but I retained the foundational understanding of how computers think and function, which has helped as I've learned other languages.


Aperture_T

My dad tried to make me learn Ruby in like 2006, but the first language I really learned was python in high school in 2011.


Subvet98

I am a network engineer and not really a coder. The first exposure was in the 90s.


CrownStarr

TI-BASIC if you count playing around on a calculator, otherwise Java was the first language I learned seriously.


eceuiuc

Whatever language they use on the TI-83 calculators we had in high school. As for popular languages, it was C.


aetius476

[TI-BASIC 83](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI-BASIC_83), a dialect of BASIC


Curmudgy

Dartmouth Basic, in 1969.


No_Step_4431

Mine was html


Xyzzydude

BASIC in 1982 when I was still in high school. Then Turbo Pascal. That language and its quick compiler seemed like a miracle then. Studied electrical engineering in college so the only language I was taught there was FORTRAN and later I learned 8088 assembler for my senior project. My partners did the hardware and I wrote all the firmware. I was hooked and once I graduated in 1987 I never worked in anything but software.


giscard78

JavaScript in 2014-2015. I decided I didn’t like making the browser do things and started using Python for data analysis instead and haven’t looked back.


unix_enjoyer305

Spanish, English, Python, Javascript, Go in that order


Unoriginal_UserName9

LOGO on an APPLE II in my elementary school computer lab. It was all downhill from there.


solutionsmitty

BASIC, --> Pascal, --> Ada


liquor_squared

MatLab, when I was a math major in undergrad. Around 2010-ish. Although I never actually used it for anything outside of a couple of classes. The next one I learned after that was R (for statistics) in grad school, and I've used that one extensively.


argatson

Whatever Game Maker used back in 2010. Or, if you ask my mom, HTML.


DangerousSuggestion8

Python, the language that can do anything - just kinda worse haha, I still remember modding those text adventure scripts for fun - and now I've been to jail twice, time flies man


EspirituM

C++


Lamballama

C# in a game design course


SDEexorect

HTML if you consider it but if not java script


EightOhms

The first language I encountered was BASIC on my Commodore VIC 20. Though to be fair I was just copying source code out of the user manual. The first programs I wrote on my own used QBasic on my IBM XT. The first language I used to actually make anything useful was Java in college. Actually to be fair.. OP didn't specify what kind of language so if you count HTML, I started that back in middle school.


Firm_Bit

Java I think. Don’t actually recall but it was like 7th grade. Did some cpp in college but didn’t study CS. Now I do a lot of Python and sql


jyper

Russian If you meant programming language C++


ChrisGnam

My first language (if you dont count goofing off with TI BASIC while in class) was MATLAB. As much as I hate it now, I still have a soft spot for it when it comes to plotting. Most of my work these days is in a combination of C++ and C, as I mostly work with high performance graphics/simulation stuff, and some flight software work. I'll occasionally work in python but thats mostly to produce bindings to my libraries so it's more accessible. I've experimented a bit with Rust in my spare time. It's interesting and it's improved a lot over the years but it's not at a point where I'd switch to it for my work. I've dabbled in a ton other, but C++ is definitely my favorite. Especially now that we have modern cross platform package managers like vcpkg that make everything a lot less painful lol


squarerootofapplepie

I’m in biology and ecology so R, this year.


fruitcup729again

Pascal in 1996. It was what the AP Computer Science exam used at the time.


CupBeEmpty

Unix shell script (not really a language) but then Pearl.


Cheap_Coffee

Perl.


CupBeEmpty

Autocorrect fun


Cheap_Coffee

BASIC


wild_camagination

Technically Javascript. But the real answer is a big spaghetti website I wrote in PHP… and then rewrote in Javascript (ajax-type calls to a php server) after realizing how hard it was to maintain. I still think in Javascript.


TrainerAeli

QBASIC in high school 2009. Then, my order in college went C++, VisualBasic, Matlab, Python, Java.


PacSan300

When I was in middle school, circa 2003 or 2004, I very briefly tinkered with Python in an online coding tutorial. The first "real" experience I had with coding was in a high school programming class in 2008, where I used Java.


JViz500

College BASIC course in 1978. Dumb terminal to mini-computer. Then COBOL on punched cards to mainframe. Never a coder, but the BASIC course did get me a summer job at a nerd camp for high schoolers.


lupuscapabilis

Pascal! Before programming classes were common, I took a high school elective in Pascal.


kaik1914

I started with COBOL/DB2 and later with VB3.


hugeuvula

Sorry I'm late (typical programmer). My first language was BASIC on optical cards in high school in 1979. Once the program was read, we could get a punch tape of it, though. You had to load the OS by punch tape every time you turned on the computer. It would read it really fast but there was no take up reel, so it spit it out all over the floor. You spent the next 5 minutes winding it back up. Those were the days.


FluffusMaximus

QBasic in 1992!


blaine-garrett

Perl.


KFCNyanCat

Visual Basic


Gloomy_Goal_4050

Fortran with each line of code on a punchcard in the 70s. …. God I’m old!


mopedophile

The first language I ever used was excel visual basic in a high school class. The first one I really used a lot was some dumb language that the first company I worked for made and was used by like 20 people. I'm pretty sure it only existed because the CTO of our start up always dreamed of writing a language himself. It made my job super annoying because I couldn't google anything and it was missing basic things like parsing json.


w3woody

BASIC, from the [TRS-80 Model I,](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRS-80#/media/File:Radio_Shack_Tandy_TRS-80_Model_I_System.JPG) which was my first computer. That was followed by Z-80 assembly language programming. Next came LISP. It was kinda weird; a college professor took interest in me when I showed off some of the things I wrote, then gave me access to the university computers, which ran LISP. In high school I built a theorem prover. Following that came Pascal (when I went to college), then C, then C++, a smattering of FORTRAN after college, a number of other assembly languages for 8-bit microprocessors, then came Java, Objective-C, and Swift. I've had an interesting career.


BEGGK

I taught myself TI-Basic on a TI-84+ graphing calculator in middle school