Peter Wegner

Peter Wegner
Born(1932-08-20)August 20, 1932[2]
DiedJuly 27, 2017(2017-07-27) (aged 84)[2][3]
Alma materUniversity of London[1]
AwardsFellow of the ACM  (1995)
Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, First Class  (1999)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InstitutionsUniversity of London
University of Cambridge
Brown University
ThesisProgramming Languages, Information Structures And Machine Organization (1968)
Doctoral advisorMaurice Wilkes[1]
Doctoral studentsWilliam Cook[1]
Websitewww.cs.brown.edu/~pw

Peter A.[4] Wegner (August 20, 1932 – July 27, 2017) was a professor of computer science at Brown University from 1969 to 1999. He made significant contributions to both the theory of object-oriented programming during the 1980s and to the relevance of the Church–Turing thesis for empirical aspects of computer science during the 1990s and present. In 2016, Wegner wrote a brief autobiography for Conduit, the annual Brown University Computer Science department magazine.[2][5][6][7][8][9]

  1. ^ a b c Peter Wegner at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ a b c Peter Wegner: A Life Remarkable
  3. ^ In Memoriam: Peter Wegner, 1932-2017, 27 July 2017, retrieved 28 July 2017
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference Warren_2013 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ Wegner, Peter. MathSciNet
  6. ^ Peter Wegner at DBLP Bibliography Server Edit this at Wikidata
  7. ^ Peter Wegner publications indexed by Microsoft Academic
  8. ^ Peter Wegner author profile page at the ACM Digital Library Edit this at Wikidata
  9. ^ Wegner, P. (1997). "Why interaction is more powerful than algorithms". Communications of the ACM. 40 (5): 80–91. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.57.9269. doi:10.1145/253769.253801. S2CID 11605796.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy