E.W.Dijkstra Archive

(cs.utexas.edu)

52 points | by surprisetalk 2 hours ago

2 comments

  • coderatlarge 2 hours ago
    what a charming time it was when that generation discovered a bunch of stuff that now undergirds daily life:

    “ Dijkstra always believed it a scientist’s duty to maintain a lively correspondence with his scientific colleagues. To a greater extent than most of us, he put that conviction into practice. For over four decades, he mailed copies of his consecutively numbered technical notes, trip reports, insightful observations, and pungent commentaries, known collectively as “EWDs”, to several dozen recipients in academia and industry. Thanks to the ubiquity of the photocopier and the wide interest in Dijkstra’s writings, the informal circulation of many of the EWDs eventually reached into the thousands. “

    random sample of a trip note in which he is in ited to consult on a project that he thinks ought to be killed:

    https://www.cs.utexas.edu/~EWD/ewd06xx/EWD601.PDF

    • fghiop 1 hour ago
      > ... cannot be expected from the average programmer

      Ha! He had to deal with the political B.S. of well-spoken self-important people who spend excessively long and write excessively long code/proofs getting accolades over those that just get things done in the best way! I feel for him!

    • throwaway0xTA 36 minutes ago
      Digistra’s writing, trip report to Munich, a mechanical repair where a three-fold deduction takes place between 26-27 Nov. 1976.

      The prose strikes one in the vein of a 20th century existential writer.

  • throwaway0xTA 54 minutes ago
    In this thesis, we restrict ourselves to a tape reader (150 characters per second) and a tape punch (25 characters per second).

    Dijkstra’s I/O apparatus corresponds to communication mechanisms for tape reading.