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OFFICIAL *school projects* Thread.

Name: Anonymous 2010-08-07 12:31

I'm interested in what you guys where capable of in your teens!

My Middle School project consisted of a very simple platformer game written in Pascal (mandatory).

The character could move Mario style and even jump Maria style. He could fire shit and shit get's fired at him by evil alien robots and over flying monstrosities. It was fun but I didn't have time to write a story line so it's only had five levels.

My HighSchool programming project consisted of sword fight thing simulation. The player would use the mouse as if he was handling the sword together with options to control the shield and pull out some dirty tricks. The graphics were horrendous though. I couldn't manage to anything better than stick figures.

That's it.

What are yours?

Name: Anonymous 2010-08-07 14:10

High School:
-True BASIC
The project was insignificant; however, I think I accidentally object-oriented programming.  I wish I still had the original source code - all I remember is, even with comments, my professor couldn't make heads or tails of how it worked.  I think I even lost track of how it worked and just ran with it to its conclusion.

College:
-C/C++ (non-OOP)
Just a calculator.  I wanted to make it graph too but could never get that part working properly.  That, and the course could be summed up as "this is what they do in C, and this is how C++ does something similar."  It hurt as much as it sounds.
-C++ (OOP)
Designed own matrix math library.
-OpenGL
No final project, just a test.  It wasn't very a very well taught class.
-Java (1)
Billiards.
-Java (2)
3D Billiards (the physics was crap).
Semi-final project (C++ and OpenGL)
Model of the solar system using "realistic" physics.  Everything kept smashing into each other around the tenth revolution.  We had to "fix" the position of the Sun or else Mercury would die almost immediately.
Final project (VB, C++)
Sub-video processing to allow a series of images to overlap each other and be displayed on the interior of a spherical surface.

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