Comment by redbell

3 years ago

Scanning "Visual Basic 6" in the title instantly triggered a strong haptic feedback in my heart!

VB6 is how I learned to speak to the computer and make it do anything I wanted it to do.

I was in high school when I built a simple, yet funny, game in VB6. I was a novice, but the game was working like a charm. The concept was basic, the alphabet letters, randomly falling down the screen from top to bottom, and you had to press the corresponding key on the keyboard before the letter totally disappeared at the bottom of the screen. When you hit the letter, it would explode with a nice animation while playing an "explosion.wav" sound file. When missed, the screen would get a red flash with an alert sound. I then took a step further by introducing "levels", which were basically a mix of falling speed and adding extra characters, like UPPERCASE letters, where you should hold the SHIFT key when pressing the letters, numbers on the keypad, and even special characters that have a special combination on the keyboard.

Sometime later, one of my elder brothers was studying at a broad university (in Europe to be precise), and as a final project of his studies, he was required to build something using programming — anything that runs on a computer! He reached out for help, and I told him I'd built a game, He asked me to send it over, and when he pressed the F5 key on his keyboard and ran it, he was amazed at how funny it was. He had a tiny challenge, though, he was obliged to explain how he built it in presentation. I can’t forget how I explained the code to him and what each function meant. I was in a public park, and the people were staring at me like I was not OK! I was yielding on the phone: "read that IsPressedLetterOnScreen function", "check that class", "go to line 99", "make a break point here", "press CTRL+F5".. you know..

In the end, he fully understood how it was working, presented the game, wowed the evaluators/teachers and, per his claims, got the highest score among all of his colleagues. Hearing that his (I mean, my) game was the best project presented that year made me the happiest person living on the planet that day..

That's my story with VB6.. in a nutshell, and that's why I felt the haptic feedback in my heart!

Love the story! It almost makes me feel good about academic fraud, no sarcasm intended.

I sincerely hope your nick is not PII though or you might have incriminated your brother.