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British computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare (/hɔːr/; born 11 January 1934), also known as C. A. R. Hoare, is a British computer scientist who has made foundational contributions to programming languages, algorithms, operating systems, formal verification, and concurrent computing.[3] His work earned him the Turing Award, usually regarded as the highest distinction in computer science, in 1980.
Sir Tony Hoare | |
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Born | Charles Antony Richard Hoare 11 January 1934 |
Education | |
Known for | |
Spouse | Jill Pym |
Children | 3 |
Awards | Turing Award (1980) Harry H. Goode Memorial Award (1981) Faraday Medal (1985) Computer Pioneer Award (1990) Kyoto Prize (2000) IEEE John von Neumann Medal (2011) Royal Medal (2023) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer science |
Institutions | |
Doctoral students | |
Website | www |
Hoare developed the sorting algorithm quicksort in 1959–1960.[4] He developed Hoare logic, an axiomatic basis for verifying program correctness. In the semantics of concurrency, he introduced the formal language communicating sequential processes (CSP) to specify the interactions of concurrent processes, and along with Edsger Dijkstra, formulated the dining philosophers problem.[5][6][7][8][9][10] Since 1977, he has held positions at the University of Oxford and Microsoft Research in Cambridge.
Tony Hoare was born in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to British parents; his father was a colonial civil servant and his mother was the daughter of a tea planter. Hoare was educated in England at the Dragon School in Oxford and the King's School in Canterbury.[11] He then studied Classics and Philosophy ("Greats") at Merton College, Oxford.[12] On graduating in 1956 he did 18 months National Service in the Royal Navy,[12] where he learned Russian.[13] He returned to the University of Oxford in 1958 to study for a postgraduate certificate in statistics,[12] and it was here that he began computer programming, having been taught Autocode on the Ferranti Mercury by Leslie Fox.[14] He then went to Moscow State University as a British Council exchange student,[12] where he studied machine translation under Andrey Kolmogorov.[13]
In 1960, Hoare left the Soviet Union and began working at Elliott Brothers Ltd,[12] a small computer manufacturing firm located in London. There, he implemented the language ALGOL 60 and began developing major algorithms.[15][16]
He was involved with developing international standards in programming and informatics, as a member of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group 2.1 on Algorithmic Languages and Calculi,[17] which specified, maintains, and supports the languages ALGOL 60 and ALGOL 68.[18]
He became the Professor of Computing Science at the Queen's University of Belfast in 1968, and in 1977 returned to Oxford as the Professor of Computing to lead the Programming Research Group in the Oxford University Computing Laboratory (now Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford), following the death of Christopher Strachey. He became the first Christopher Strachey Professor of Computing on its establishment in 1988 until his retirement at Oxford in 2000.[19] He is now an Emeritus Professor there, and is also a principal researcher at Microsoft Research in Cambridge, England.[20][21][22]
Hoare's most significant work has been in the following areas: his sorting and selection algorithm (Quicksort and Quickselect), Hoare logic, the formal language communicating sequential processes (CSP) used to specify the interactions between concurrent processes (and implemented in various programming languages such as occam), structuring computer operating systems using the monitor concept, and the axiomatic specification of programming languages.[23][24]
Speaking at a software conference in 2009, Tony Hoare hyperbolically apologized for inventing the null reference:[25][26]
I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn't resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years.[27]
For many years under his leadership, Hoare's Oxford department worked on formal specification languages such as CSP and Z. These did not achieve the expected take-up by industry, and in 1995 Hoare was led to reflect upon the original assumptions:[28]
Ten years ago, researchers into formal methods (and I was the most mistaken among them) predicted that the programming world would embrace with gratitude every assistance promised by formalisation to solve the problems of reliability that arise when programs get large and more safety-critical. Programs have now got very large and very critical – well beyond the scale which can be comfortably tackled by formal methods. There have been many problems and failures, but these have nearly always been attributable to inadequate analysis of requirements or inadequate management control. It has turned out that the world just does not suffer significantly from the kind of problem that our research was originally intended to solve.
A commemorative article was written in tribute to Hoare on his 90th birthday.[29]
In 1962, Hoare married Jill Pym, a member of his research team.[45]
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