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Verofant
1 year ago

BASIC. I’m a little older.

I also mastered programming in Assembler (machine code). I don’t know if it’s still there.

Erzesel
1 year ago

When I went to school, there were no computers for general use.

In the mathematics/physical background of the 9th/10th classes there was at best a short outline of the structure and function of Logic groups and calculation with binary numbers. (With relays and transistors) .

The most common thing that could possibly appear with a student in class was the calculator “Specific 100” … taking part in school was a courageous undertaking. With a price of 900 Mark (1 monthly wage), the property was already a status symbol and not necessarily wanted in class. (If the teacher can’t afford such a part, it certainly won’t be good if a pupil awakens pleasure)

I was 23..24 when the first computers got into the market and became more or less obsessed by coincidence of the necessary components in order to solder my first U880 computer together at “realistic” prices…

From a C64 at that time was only dreaming in the GDR… 1400DM…convertedly 10000 GDR mark.For this one could buy a house…

…but that was long after my school. In the 1970s, programmer languages were also reserved for academics with doctoral titles in the rest of the world.

MartinusDerNerd
1 year ago

Hello!

It’s been a little longer with me.

With me it was in school the language Basic on a Siemens-Nixdorf-XT computer, with PC-DOS.

Our teacher would rather have taught the language of Fortran.

But at that time, I already ruled the basic completely. I learned it autodidacically on my C64.

Then I learned Pascal and C (K&R). Assembler for the C64 and Atari ST/Falcon030 (Also: C6510 and M68000/030).

I’m currently dealing with Python. But just next door.

Greeting

Martin

weisserMann04
1 year ago

Basic. The computers ran on MS DOS as an operating system. Later, I was still busy with Pascal and programmed under UNIX applications. But that hasn’t been fun anymore, it was a necessary means for the purpose. Therefore, I have also become a pure user very quickly, have been happy about selection menus and completely abandoned to program something yourself.

Franz1957
1 year ago

Only when I finished with the Abitur, our school got its first computer, an IMSAI 8080. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMSAI_8080 In order to operate this computer, knowledge in binary code was required. The operating system and programs like “moon landing” were read in by a hole strip. A teleprinting apparatus with paper roll was used for input and output. I had programming lessons as a student, with FORTRAN and Pascal.

Thesecretguy
1 year ago

Currently only Scratch, but from class 9, we will certainly learn Java or Python 🙂

LG

WeissBrot965
1 year ago
Reply to  Thesecretguy

You learn Java in the upper level.

Lg

jo135
1 year ago

Which one?

Once (as far as I remember) Pascal, then the closely related Modula-2, then also Lisp.

In the end, language doesn’t matter, it’s about principles and ways of thinking.

Palladin007
1 year ago

In training then C and later C#.

“Used” is the right word, because one cannot speak of “trained” 😀

Valentin1720653
1 year ago

C++, however, was only at the university.

Suiram1
1 year ago

I didn’t have it yet, but we’ll have it from the 10th.

Asporc
1 year ago

Also SQL

VhazeGOD3
1 year ago

Eos. Was very funny

Deneuker99
1 year ago

I think java

Xyz610
1 year ago

I think. We hadn’t learned how they were all.

Devrunrik
1 year ago

Scratch💀

Potterhead311
1 year ago

Ka we do what in Scratch

WeissBrot965
1 year ago
Reply to  Potterhead311

This is not a programming language 🤦 ♂️

DieStudierte
1 year ago

And assembler

LeBonyt
1 year ago

Turbo Pascal.