List of famous APL users: Difference between revisions
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* [[wikipedia:Rob Pike|Rob Pike]] develops the APL-like calculator [[Ivy]] | * [[wikipedia:Rob Pike|Rob Pike]] develops the APL-like calculator [[Ivy]] | ||
* [[Richard Stallman]] | * [[Richard Stallman]] | ||
* [[wikipedia:Ken Thompson|Ken Thompson]] was the original implementer of [[APL\11]]<ref>Lee Dickey. [https://groups.google.com/g/comp.lang.apl/c/u9sl6gz4IYs APL\11 source now available] on comp.lang.apl. 1993-04-15.</ref> | * [[wikipedia:Ken Thompson|Ken Thompson]] was the original implementer of [[APL\11]]<ref>Lee Dickey. [https://groups.google.com/g/comp.lang.apl/c/u9sl6gz4IYs APL\11 source now available] on comp.lang.apl. 1993-04-15.</ref> | ||
Revision as of 12:50, 19 March 2024
This page lists people or companies that have made significant use of APL, and are famous for reasons other than APL specifically (Ken Iverson and Arthur Whitney are the only people to achieve substantial fame for APL or array programming).
Individuals
- Frank Anscombe
- Henry Baker[1]
- Tim Bourke
- Dan Bricklin was an implementer of Multics APL in 1973[2]
- Fred Brooks[3]
- Horst Feistel[4]
- Bill Gates[5][6][7][8]
- Robert Griesemer[9]
- Jeremy Howard[10]
- Stanley Jordan[11] has presented at APL89 and APL90 and attended Minnowbrook
- Andrew Koenig[12]
- Alan Perlis
- Rob Pike develops the APL-like calculator Ivy
- Richard Stallman
- Ken Thompson was the original implementer of APL\11[13]
Organizations
Because of APL's wide reach historically, only organizations that have major APL projects or groups with many programmers are listed.
Companies
- IBM
- SimCorp presents frequently at Dyalog user meetings
Universities
References
- ↑ Henry G. Baker. On the permutations of a vector obtainable through the restructure and transpose functions of APL. ACM SIGAPL APL Quote Quad. Volume 23, Issue 2. Dec. 1992.
- ↑ Charles Babbage Institute. An Interview with Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston. Conducted by Martin Campbell-Kelly and Paul Ceruzzi. 2004-05-07.
- ↑ Adin Falkoff and Ken Iverson. The Evolution of APL. ACM SIGPLAN Notices Volume 13, Number 8. 1978-08.
- ↑ Alan G. Konheim. Horst Feistel: the inventor of LUCIFER, the cryptographic algorithm that changed cryptology. Journal of Cryptographic Engineering (2019) 9:85–100 (doi:10.1000/182).
- ↑ Jay Whipple III. Lessons from 40 Years of APL (Not Old Enough for 50 Years!) at Dyalog '16.
- ↑ Bill Gates. Open Letter to Hobbyists. 1976.
- ↑ Bill Gates. APL: Good For the Brain. Electronics Today International. March 1979.
- ↑ David Allison. Video interview with Bill Gates (transcript). National Museum of American History.
- ↑ Rob Pike. Implementing a bignum calculator. Golang-syd. Nov 2014.
- ↑ Array Cast episode 31: Jeremy Howard - Data Scientist. 2022-07-08.
- ↑ Stanley Jordan. V. Tools and Technology: The APL Language. Accessed 2021-01-07.
- ↑ Bjarne Stroustrup. Email exchange with Bob Armstrong. 1995-09-20–1995-10-02.
- ↑ Lee Dickey. APL\11 source now available on comp.lang.apl. 1993-04-15.
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