Donald knuth education

Donald Ervin Knuth

Born January 10, 1938, Milwaukee, Wis.; writer and teacher of the Art of Programming, three of seven promised volumes having been completed; developer of the text language TEX.

Education: BA and MS, summa cum laude, physics, Case Institute of Technology, 1960; PhD, mathematics, California Institute of Technology, 1963.

Professional Experience: faculty member, California Institute of Technology, 1963-1968; mathematician, Institute for Defense Analysis, Princeton, N.J., 1968-1969; Fletcher Jones Professor of Computer Science, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1969-1989; professor of the Art of Programming, 1990-present.

Honors and Awards: ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award, 1971; ACM Turing Award, 1974; Lester R. Ford Award, Mathematical Association of America, 1975; National Medal of Science, 1979; IEEE McDowell Award, 1980; IEEE Computer Society Pioneer Award, 1982; Computer Science Education Award, 1986; ACM Systems Software Award, 1986; Steele Prize, Association for Management Systems, 1986; New York Academy of Sciences Award, 1987; Franklin Meda

Donald Knuth

American computer scientist and mathematician (born 1938)

Donald Knuth

Knuth in 2011

Born

Donald Ervin Knuth


(1938-01-10) January 10, 1938 (age 87)

Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.

Education
Known for

See list

    • The Art of Computer Programming,
    • TeX, METAFONT,
    • Computer Modern,
    • Knuth's up-arrow notation,
    • Knuth–Morris–Pratt algorithm,
    • Knuth–Bendix completion algorithm,
    • MMIX,
    • Robinson–Schensted–Knuth correspondence, LR parser,
    • Literate programming
SpouseNancy Jill Carter
Children2
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsStanford University
University of Oslo
ThesisFinite Semifields and Projective Planes (1963)
Doctoral advisorMarshall Hall, Jr.[2]
Doctoral students
Websitecs.stanford.edu/~knuth

Donald Ervin Knuth ([3]kə-NOOTH; born January 10, 1938) is an American computer scientist and mathematician. He is a professor emeritus at Stanford University. He is the 1974 recipient of the ACM Turing Award, informally considered the Nobe

Donald Ervin Knuth is an American computer scientist, mathematician, and Professor Emeritus at Stanford University.

He is the author of the multi-volume work The Art of Computer Programming and has been called the "father" of the analysis of algorithms. He contributed to the development of the rigorous analysis of the computational complexity of algorithms and systematized formal mathematical techniques for it. In the process he also popularized the asymptotic notation. In addition to fundamental contributions in several branches of theoretical computer science, Knuth is the creator of the TeX computer typesetting system, the related METAFONT font definition language and rendering system, and the Computer Modern family of typefaces.

As a writer and scholar,[4] Knuth created the WEB and CWEB computer programming systems designed to encourage and facilitate literate programming, and designed the MIX/MMIX instruction set architectures. As a member of the academic and scientific community, Knuth is strongly opposed to the policy of granting software patents. He has expressed his d

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