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Chapter 1 - Introduction




If you want to learn programming, you've just made the right choice. BBC BASIC has a long and mature pedigree and is ideally suited if you are taking your first steps in making the computer do what you want, rather than what someone else thinks you want. Once you've mastered the fundamentals, the domain of this tutorial, BBC BASIC will stay with you all the way.

This tutorial assumes absolutely no prior knowledge of any programming language, but if you have dabbled before, it won't hurt. I must emphasize at the outset that its scope is purposely limited. It doesn't cover, for example, file handling or graphics. This is not because these subjects are difficult, but rather that the intention was to leave the reader with a thorough knowledge of the building blocks of all programs and know where to find pointers for the rest.

I am not going to tell you how to install BBC BASIC as this is straightforward enough. The only thing that is assumed is that you can open a simple text editor (e.g. Notepad), enter some text, use cut and paste, save it and re-open it later. If you can't do this, I suggest that you may not have had sufficient exposure to computers in general to benefit from learning to program at this moment. Go to the library, get yourself an introductory book and come back in a week.

Learning to program is an interactive experience. I have programmed in several languages over the years and bought several of those big thick books that cost £30+. They all have CDs in the back with all the examples ready to run. How does anyone learn? I always ignore the CDs and type listings in by hand. That way you make mistakes. This is an advantage. By making and correcting mistakes, you learn far more than by just glancing over some source code and then running a precompiled example. It takes a little bit longer, but is far more worthwhile.

Most of the examples are only 10 - 20 lines long anyway, so improve your touch typing, it'll be worth it. Similarly, a lot of the listings don't have example outputs. This again is to encourage you to type this stuff in and get it running on your own. The other thing is, play with the examples, improve them, prod them and find out what happens if ... Once you get the bug (no pun intended) you'll not be able to leave this alone. Have fun.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to my family who still can't understand what makes someone who programs for a living come home and do it for a hobby too.

Thanks must also go to Richard Russell for having the foresight to carry on developing and improving a language that first saw the light of day over twenty years ago and also for making suggestions and improvements to this document.

Any comments and questions please contact me at nextstep61@yahoo.co.uk

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