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http://sheeped.com/2007/02/03/how-i-taught-myself-programming-by-ma...

TechSiddhu rated 30 months agoFeatured Review
From the page: "This is the tale of how I wanted to create my own computer game, how I taught myself programming by doing it (not the other way around), and why I think you should do the same. My Story My first exposure to computer programming was back when I was about 12. Some of the cool ... more
Tags: programming, mud

7 Reviews

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Tresmius rated 16 months agoprogramming
From the page: "Briefly about MUDs: If youâ€ve never heard of or played MUDs, I strongly encourage you to give them a try. They may not have graphics, but that is exactly what gives them power. Theyâ€re like books â€" if you have a decent imagination, you donâ€t need graphics. In fact, Iâ€d play a MUD over a game with crappy graphics any day. MUDs are also incredibly educational â€" if I hadnâ€t played MUDs, I wouldnâ€t be speaking nor writing English nearly as well as I do today (Iâ€m not a native speaker), and I probably wouldnâ€t know much about programming either. If youâ€re still not curious, thereâ€s also the fact that about half of MUD players are female (*wink*)."
FlyingIsFun1217 rated 20 months agoprogramming, c, games, mud
One of the greatest ways to get into something. DIVE IN!
TechSiddhu rated 30 months agoprogramming
From the page: "This is the tale of how I wanted to create my own computer game, how I taught myself programming by doing it (not the other way around), and why I think you should do the same. My Story My first exposure to computer programming was back when I was about 12. Some of the cool boys at school (you know how it%u2019s like) were playing a fantasy game with each other, all in text. They called it a %u201CMUD%u201C, one of the oldest genres of computer games. I grew curious and it didn%u2019t take long before I was sat at home, religiously emerged in text worlds, rather than graphical games like Quake and Counter-Strike (both wildly popular back then, of course). Briefly about MUDs: If you%u2019ve never heard of or played MUDs, I strongly encourage you to give them a try. They may not have graphics, but that is exactly what gives them power. They%u2019re like books %u2014 if you have a decent imagination, you don%u2019t need graphics. In fact, I%u2019d play a MUD over a game with crappy graphics any day. MUDs are also incredibly educational %u2014 if I hadn%u2019t played MUDs, I wouldn%u2019t be speaking nor writing English nearly as well as I do today (I%u2019m not a native speaker), and I probably wouldn%u2019t know much about programming either. If you%u2019re still not curious, there%u2019s also the fact that about half of MUD players are female (*wink*). Anyway, after a while I decided I wanted to create my own game. I downloaded a C codebase and started hacking away at the source, experimenting and learning the basics of programming (I was completely clueless before MUDs). Creating a game was no longer a mere dream %u2014 I was doing it, even though I was quite a newbie. I was in the matrix. Eventually, my little project evolved into more than just a spare-time thing and was serving a couple thousand players, admittedly not simultaneously but I was still quite impressed, and I had learned many a valuable lesson about everything from love to programming. I took the plunge into the world of programming without reading any books on the subject. I am a person who learns best from practice, so it wasn%u2019t all that bad. I bent, I broke and I played with the code and eventually I learned all about functions, pointers, memory management, and all the other fun feats of C. The only downside to this was that I was not learning contemporary programming languages and methods. Until recently, that has been the single biggest reason why I haven%u2019t recommended that anyone interested in programming start out by trying to create their own MUD. MUD codebases are old%u2026 Well, most of them, anyway."
aPlatypus rated 30 months agoprogramming, education, fun, learning, mud
Great stuff and hey -- you don't have to follow the example explicitly. In th past I've picked up quite a few languages, translating (say) a C programme into ICON or or making an OO program from something structured like C or Pascal to Python or Ruby. Go for it folks!!
ntltrmllgnc rated 30 months agoprogramming
don't be afraid, learn!
Zero1Infinity rated 30 months agoprogramming, game, mud
An article about progamming MUD games and about NakedMud which has a phyton scripting engine
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