06-16-2011, 07:57 PM
16 and I'm 16 now and I'm still learning! =D
At What Age Did You Learn C++
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06-16-2011, 07:57 PM
16 and I'm 16 now and I'm still learning! =D
06-17-2011, 02:04 AM
I was 16 when I first started coding in VB and now in c++/c# and i'm turning 17 in 2 months
06-17-2011, 01:12 PM
I started about 2 months ago, I am turning 16 in July.
06-17-2011, 08:47 PM
Started learning at 15 and am still learning now.
06-18-2011, 12:22 AM
I started when I was 14, and now I am 15 and I know HTML, CSS, Python and I know the basics of C++.
08-05-2011, 07:12 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-05-2011, 07:14 AM by icecubemachines.)
14 ftw.
That's like, 10 years ago. Frak I'm getting old. Stuff I know: C, C++ C#, D2, Java, J#, PHP, ASM, Haskell, Python, VHDL, ETH Oberon (if you know the last one, give my regards to you-know-who). Can't recall anything more, but there might be others. I tend to skip the easy ones (such as VB) when making a list. I could add HTML, CSS and anything XML based, but that's rather lame. No-one actually bothers to remember those anyway. I can shell script on Linux (bash ftw) and Windows (but that's hardly a feat). I can get my AHK scripts working pretty easily. I know some obscure stuff, like PEP7 opcode and I can write machine code for an i386, but neither of those is actually useful. Machine code sounds cool at first, but once you realize it takes 2 pages to write a function to divide 2n by n, you quickly move on to something higher level and forget you ever thought it was awesome. All in all, I can read code much like a book now, so the actual language doesn't really matter that much anymore. I'm now at a stage where I've seen almost everything there is code-wise, and it's starting to become hard to separate "code knowledge" from "common knowledge". I honestly don't know what new programmers see when they read code, because it all makes sense to me. Yesterday I made a parameter-less C++ function with type-safe return type overloading in about half an hour. The fact that no-one gets what that means does get bothersome sometimes, though. It leaves you with few people to brag to, and most of the other +10 year coders don't like to give compliments. They're more like "I could do that better if I really wanted to" ^^
08-07-2011, 11:15 AM
12, and now I am 17.
08-09-2011, 01:54 PM
I first started working on C++ about 9 months ago (I'm 23).
08-09-2011, 02:29 PM
Im still learning it,but I've started few months before I went to high school.
Skype:therekz | Msn:jekleni@hfub3r.com | AIM:jeklenii
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