• Hello

    From Thesystemguy@VERT/CAVEBBS to All on Wed Mar 30 08:21:00 2022
    Hi everyone. I am a newbie here. Hope everyone is having a nice day.

    -TSG, TheSystemGuy

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  • From SYS64738@VERT/DIBZNET to Thesystemguy on Fri Apr 1 05:44:00 2022
    Hi everyone. I am a newbie here. Hope everyone is having a nice day.

    Glad to have you here!
  • From Prof Brown@VERT/OLDTMBBS to Thesystemguy on Tue Apr 5 14:29:22 2022
    How's it going? You do any programming yourself?

    Hi everyone. I am a newbie here. Hope everyone is having a nice day.

    -TSG, TheSystemGuy

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  • From cr1mson@VERT/STEPPING to Thesystemguy on Mon Jul 18 11:55:00 2022
    --==] Thesystemguy scribbled to All [==--

    Hi everyone. I am a newbie here. Hope everyone is having a nice day.

    Hello. What brings you to programming?

    ... "42? 7 and a half million years and all you can come up with is 42?!"
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    þ Synchronet þ Sunflower Region 14 BBS -- telnet://vintagebbsing.com
  • From cr1mson@VERT/STEPPING to SYS64738 on Mon Jul 18 11:56:00 2022
    --==] SYS64738 scribbled to Thesystemguy [==--

    Hi everyone. I am a newbie here. Hope everyone is having a nice day.

    Glad to have you here!

    cout >> "Hello!" >> endl;


    ---

    Sincerely,
    Jon Justvig
    Sunflower Region 14 BBS
    telnet://vintagebbsing.com
    http://vintagebbsing.com

    ... 2 + 2 = 5 for extremely large values of 2.
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  • From Nightfox@VERT/DIGDIST to cr1mson on Wed Jul 20 02:09:37 2022
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: cr1mson to SYS64738 on Mon Jul 18 2022 06:56 pm

    cout >> "Hello!" >> endl;

    You have the > symbols backwards.. It would be:

    cout << "Hello!" << endl;

    Nightfox

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  • From Jared@VERT/JUMPLEFT to cr1mson on Wed Jul 27 06:45:53 2022
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: cr1mson to Thesystemguy on Mon Jul 18 2022 18:55:00

    Hello. What brings you to programming?


    My anwswer to that one is easy... BASIC on a Microbee in 1986 bought me to programming.

    de VK2WAY

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  • From Moondog@VERT/CAVEBBS to Jared on Wed Jul 27 17:59:00 2022
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: Jared to cr1mson on Wed Jul 27 2022 01:45 pm

    Re: Re: Hello
    By: cr1mson to Thesystemguy on Mon Jul 18 2022 18:55:00

    Hello. What brings you to programming?


    My anwswer to that one is easy... BASIC on a Microbee in 1986 bought me to

    de VK2WAY


    With me it was when our science classroom bought a Commodore PET in 1981. We learned as a class to write programs in BASIC, then worked as teams to write programs that demonstrated what we learned. In most cases one or two
    students did all the work, and the other team members goofed off. We'd all be
    tested individually, so paying attention was important.

    To me at the time, computers were magical. The idea that you could tell a computer what to do by writing and keying in code was also magical. it was like writing spells. We didn't get too technical in what all could be done
    in BASIC though. It was basically creating processes requiring input statements that would be used in making math programs, or you would enter a name, a noun, a verb, and some adjectives, and it will create a story where
    it fills in the blanks with the words you gave it. I wanted to learn more advanced skills such as variables and arrays to make the story programs more random, however my guess was the teacher hadn't read that far in the book
    yet.

    I never went much further in programming even though I had an Atari 400 then later a C-64. I would try to learn, but I probably could've learned more
    if I had learned flowcharting as it related to creating larger programs with multiple loops and subroutines.

    Now that I have a couple of Raspberry Pi's and a Rock64 sbc, I would like to learn Python so I can make use of the GPIO pins.

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  • From Vk3jed@VERT/FREEWAY to Jared on Thu Jul 28 12:20:00 2022
    On 07-27-22 13:45, Jared wrote to cr1mson <=-

    @VIA: VERT/JUMPLEFT
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: cr1mson to Thesystemguy on Mon Jul 18 2022 18:55:00

    Hello. What brings you to programming?


    My anwswer to that one is easy... BASIC on a Microbee in 1986 bought
    me to programming.

    I started with Applesoft on an Apple ][, then Turbo Pascal on the same platform (with Z80 cards), and later Turbo Pascal on DOS. Even wrote a bit of Assembler on processors such as 8086 and 6809 loved the 6809)

    Then I largely quit, other than batch and Linux shell scripting, and a bit of PIC ASM. Did dabble in Java for a short period though.


    ... Why risk a hangover? Stay Drunk!!
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  • From Dumas Walker@VERT/CAPCITY2 to CR1MSON on Thu Jul 28 09:39:00 2022
    Hello. What brings you to programming?

    COBOL


    * SLMR 2.1a * Nothing is so smiple that it can't get screwed up.

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  • From CDP@VERT/DMINE to ALL on Thu Jul 28 15:15:37 2022
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: Jared to cr1mson on Wed Jul 27 2022 01:45 pm

    Re: Re: Hello
    By: cr1mson to Thesystemguy on Mon Jul 18 2022 18:55:00

    Hello. What brings you to programming?


    Microsoft Disk Extended Basic and then later Basic09 on the Coco 2 and Coco 3. Did a little in C and Java after and took Cobol in high school. I don't do much programming in my day job outside of some scripting.
    Good times though.
    -----------------------
    CDP
    - The Diamond Mine BBS
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  • From unixl0rd@VERT/BEERS20 to Vk3jed on Fri Aug 12 12:31:00 2022
    I'm currently learning 6809 assembly on a TRS-80 (CoCo) emulator. It's pretty advanced features for an 8-bit cpu: two stacks, 16-bit registers, a multiply instruction, and best of all; a SEX instruction.

    ... Decimal points are always one place too far to the left.
  • From Vk3jed@VERT/FREEWAY to unixl0rd on Sat Aug 13 11:05:00 2022
    On 08-12-22 19:31, unixl0rd wrote to Vk3jed <=-

    @VIA: VERT/BEERS20
    I'm currently learning 6809 assembly on a TRS-80 (CoCo) emulator. It's pretty advanced features for an 8-bit cpu: two stacks, 16-bit
    registers, a multiply instruction, and best of all; a SEX instruction.

    I did a little bit of 6809 ASM at university. That's one chip I really loved programming. Seemed very easy to work with, and one I think I could quickly get used to again.

    ... Decimal points are always one place too far to the left.

    Depends what it is. ;)


    ... I find circuses a little too sinister.
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  • From CDP@VERT/DMINE to unixl0rd on Sat Aug 13 13:28:56 2022
    Re: Re: Hello
    By: unixl0rd to Vk3jed on Fri Aug 12 2022 07:31 pm

    I'm currently learning 6809 assembly on a TRS-80 (CoCo) emulator. It's prett

    ... Decimal points are always one place too far to the left.

    That was one of things on my computing bucket list as a kid. I have the Coco-PI now and am thinking of trying it out at some point. It's nice that all the books (or the ones that matter I guess) are all available on PDF these days. -----------------------
    CDP
    - The Diamond Mine BBS
    -----------------------

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