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Federal Election Op-Ed by Brian Day : Dr. Brian Day brianday.ca |
Brian Wilson Kernighan (pronounced /ˈkɛrn Kernighan's name became widely known through co-authorship of the first book on the C programming language with Dennis Ritchie. Kernighan has said that he had no part in the design of the C language ("it's entirely Dennis Ritchie's work"). He authored many Unix programs, including ditroff, and cron for Version 7 Unix. In collaboration with Shen Lin he devised well-known heuristics for two NP-complete optimization problems: graph partitioning and the travelling salesman problem. (In a display of authorial equity, the former is usually called the Kernighan–Lin algorithm, while the latter is styled Lin–Kernighan.) Kernighan was the software editor for Prentice Hall International. His "Software Tools" series spread the essence of 'C/Unix thinking' with makeovers for BASIC, FORTRAN, and Pascal - and most notably his 'Ratfor' (rational FORTRAN) was put in the public domain. He has said that if stranded on an island with only one programming language it would have to be C.[1] Kernighan is also known as a coiner of the expression "What You See Is All You Get (WYSIAYG)", which is sarcastic variant of the original "What You See Is What You Get" (WYSIWYG). Kernighan's term is used to indicate that WYSIWYG systems might throw away information in a document that could be useful in other contexts.
[edit] EducationHe received his Bachelor's degree in Engineering Physics from the University of Toronto. He received his PhD in electrical engineering from Princeton University, where he has held a professorship in the department of computer science since 2000. Each fall he teaches a course called "Computers in Our World", which introduces the fundamentals of computing to non-majors. He has on occasion revealed it was his own pun which led to the use of the name 'Unix' (initially 'Unics') for the operating system Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie were working on. [edit] Summary of achievements
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Categories: 1942 births | Living people | Canadian computer scientists | Computer pioneers | Computer programmers | Inferno people | Irish Canadians | People from Toronto | Plan 9 people | Princeton University alumni | Princeton University faculty | Programming language designers | Scientists at Bell Labs | Technology writers | University of Toronto alumni | Unix people | C programming language |
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