On Apr 5, 2020, at 6:17 PM, Antonio Carlini via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 05/04/2020 22:27, Neil Thompson via cctalk wrote:
I'm convinced that Dijksta (and anyone else
who came out with similar
comments were full of horseshit. In my opinion, it's the ability to
translate a real world "thing" into an algorithm that is the essense of
programming,
Dijkstra was a computer scientist not a computer programmer. The two are only
tangentially related!
That's clearly not true. He was hired as a programmer, the first in the country, by
the Mathematical Center. And he wrote a number of major programs: the first
implementation of the Shortest Path algorithm, the world's first ALGOL compiler, and
the THE operating system -- among others. Also the BIOS for the Electrologica X1
computer, which was the topic of his Ph.D. thesis.
It's true that later on he focused on computer science theory, but to claim that he
didn't know about programming shows a lack of understanding of his history.
BTW, the reason he didn't like the IBM 1620 is that you can't build a
multiprogramming OS on it since it has no interrupts and uses blocking I/O.
paul