Re: Lessons
By: mark lewis to Gary Perkins on Fri May 06 2011 03:21 pm
i don't have anything like that... what we used to do, waaaaaay back in the day, was to choose a small project and work on that... possibly just routine that could be used in projects and then, in some cases, individual projects were slightly modified for use in larger projects...
Understandable. I was actually surprised to get a reply here!
I'm easily distracted; I learn best when I have someone/something
to follow along with.
i know that feeling... i have to have a need for something before i can code anything ;)
Yep... I remember in high school when I was presented with a project and had
a clear goal in mind, I was pretty good at preparing the algorythm and
fleshing out the code. Nowadays, I'm like...Ok...I *really* need to get back into programming...I start reading books and online materials, but by the
time I'm halfway into the books, I haven't practiced much in between the beginning and middle, and I get lost. Those 24hr/48hr/30day books suck, there's a reason schools spend months teaching these languages...lol
So far, I've tried C, Java, and Basic .NET. I've already decided I do NOT
want to start in Windows; the IDE's I've tried *suck* for the beginner.
so... what pascal compiler are you using or wanting to use? are you looking target only one platform or multiple platforms? console text mode stuff only GUI stuff or both?
FreePascal seems like a good choice. It's current, and of course, free.
Since I don't want to start out in Windows, Linux console seems like a good choice. I could maybe start with some BBS doors... after writing one or two
on Linux, I could try porting them with a doorkit to work on Windows bulletin boards. Once I get the coding down, I could start playing around with
Windows after that.
In your experience, on Pascal, which GUI is easier to code for? X, or Win32? --- SBBSecho 2.12-Win32
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