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Donald Knuth

American computer scientist and mathematician (born 1938)

Donald Knuth

Summary

American computer scientist and mathematician (born 1938)

FieldValue
nameDonald Knuth
birth_nameDonald Ervin Knuth
imageDonald Ervin Knuth (cropped).jpg
captionKnuth in 2011
birth_date
birth_placeMilwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.
spouseNancy Jill Carter
children2
field
work_institutionsStanford University
education
doctoral_advisorMarshall Hall, Jr.
doctoral_students{{Plainlist
* Andrei Broder<ref namemathgene/}}
thesis_titleFinite Semifields and Projective Planes
thesis_year1963
thesis_urlhttps://thesis.library.caltech.edu/2441/1/Knuth_de_1963.pdf
known_for
prizes{{collapsible listtitle=See list{{Plainlist
* Foreign Member of the Royal Society (2003)<ref nameformemrs
website
  • Leonidas J. Guibas
  • Michael Fredman
  • Scott Kim
  • Vaughan Pratt
  • Robert Sedgewick
  • Jeffrey Vitter
  • Andrei Broder}}
  • SIGCSE Outstanding Contribution (1986)
  • Grace Murray Hopper Award (1971)
  • Turing Award (1974)
  • Member of the National Academy of Sciences (1975)
  • National Medal of Science (1979)
  • John von Neumann Medal (1995)
  • Harvey Prize (1995)
  • Kyoto Prize (1996)
  • Foreign Member of the Royal Society (2003)
  • Faraday Medal (2011)
  • BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award (2010)
  • Turing Lecture (2011)
  • Flajolet Lecture (2014)}}}} Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; 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 Nobel Prize of computer science. Knuth has been called the "father of the analysis of algorithms".

Knuth is the author of the multi-volume work The Art of Computer Programming. 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, Knuth created the WEB and CWEB computer programming systems designed to encourage and facilitate literate programming, and designed the MIX/MMIX instruction set architectures. He strongly opposes the granting of software patents, and has expressed his opinion to the United States Patent and Trademark Office and European Patent Organisation.

Biography

Early life

Donald Knuth was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Ervin Henry Knuth and Louise Marie Bohning. He describes his heritage as "Midwestern Lutheran German". His father owned a small printing business and taught bookkeeping. While a student at Milwaukee Lutheran High School, Knuth thought of ingenious ways to solve problems. For example, in eighth grade, he entered a contest to find the number of words that the letters in "Ziegler Giant Bar" could be rearranged to create; the judges had identified 2,500 such words. With time gained away from school due to a fake stomachache, Knuth used an unabridged dictionary and determined whether each dictionary entry could be formed using the letters in the phrase. He identified over 4,500 words, winning the contest. As prizes, the school received a new television and enough candy bars for all of his schoolmates to eat.

Education

Knuth received a scholarship in physics to the Case Institute of Technology (now part of Case Western Reserve University) in Cleveland, Ohio, enrolling in 1956. He also joined the Beta Nu Chapter of the Theta Chi fraternity. While studying physics at Case, Knuth was introduced to the IBM 650, an early commercial computer. After reading the computer's manual, Knuth decided to rewrite the assembly and compiler code for the machine used in his school because he believed he could do it better.

In 1958, Knuth created a program to help his school's basketball team win its games. He assigned "values" to players in order to gauge their probability of scoring points, a novel approach that Newsweek and CBS Evening News later reported on.

Knuth was one of the founding editors of the Case Institute's Engineering and Science Review, which won a national award as best technical magazine in 1959. He then switched from physics to mathematics, and received two degrees from Case in 1960: his Bachelor of Science, and simultaneously a master of science by a special award of the faculty, who considered his work exceptionally outstanding.

At the end of his senior year at Case in 1960, Knuth proposed to Burroughs Corporation to write an ALGOL compiler for the B205 for $5,500. The proposal was accepted and he worked on the ALGOL compiler between graduating from Case and going to Caltech.

In 1963, with mathematician Marshall Hall as his adviser,

Early work

In 1963, after receiving his PhD, Knuth joined Caltech's faculty as an assistant professor.

While at Caltech and after the success of the Burroughs B205 ALGOL compiler, he became consultant to Burroughs Corporation, joining the Product Planning Department. At Caltech he was operating as a mathematician, but at Burroughs as a programmer, working with the people he considered to have written the best software at the time: the ALGOL compiler for the B220 computer (successor to the B205).

Knuth turned down a $100,000 contract to write compilers at Green Tree Corporation, deciding instead to optimize income and continue at Caltech and Burroughs. He received a National Science Foundation Fellowship and Woodrow Wilson Foundation Fellowship, but they had the condition that the recipient could not do anything else but study as a graduate student, so he would not be able to continue as a consultant to Burroughs. He chose to turn down the fellowships and continued with Burroughs. In summer 1962, he wrote a FORTRAN compiler for Univac, but considered that "I sold my soul to the devil" to write a FORTRAN compiler.

After graduating, Knuth returned to Burroughs in June 1961, but did not tell them he had graduated with a master's degree, rather than the expected bachelor's degree. Impressed by the ALGOL syntax chart, symbol table, recursive-descent approach, and the separation of the scanning, parsing, and emitting functions of the compiler, Knuth suggested an extension to the symbol table: that one symbol could stand for a string of symbols. This became the basis of the DEFINE in Burroughs ALGOL, which has since been adopted by other languages. However, some really disliked the idea and wanted DEFINE removed. The last person to think it was a terrible idea was Edsger Dijkstra on a visit to Burroughs.

Knuth worked on simulation languages at Burroughs, producing SOL 'Simulation Oriented Language', an improvement on the state-of-the-art, co-designed with J. McNeeley. He attended a conference in Norway in May, 1967 organized by the people who invented the Simula language. Knuth influenced Burroughs to use Simula. Knuth had a long association with Burroughs as a consultant from 1960 to 1968 until his move into more academic work at Stanford in 1969.

In 1962, Knuth accepted a commission from Addison-Wesley to write a book on computer programming language compilers. While working on this project, he decided that he could not adequately treat the topic without first developing a fundamental theory of computer programming, which became The Art of Computer Programming. He originally planned to publish this as a single book, but as he developed his outline for the book, he concluded that he required six volumes, and then seven, to thoroughly cover the subject. He published the first volume in 1968.

Just before publishing the first volume of The Art of Computer Programming, Knuth left Caltech to accept employment with the Institute for Defense Analyses' Communications Research Division, then situated on the Princeton campus, which was performing mathematical research in cryptography to support the National Security Agency.

In 1967, Knuth attended a Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics conference and someone asked what he did. At the time, computer science was partitioned into numerical analysis, artificial intelligence, and programming languages. Based on his study and The Art of Computer Programming book, Knuth decided the next time someone asked he would say, "Analysis of algorithms".

In 1969, Knuth left his position at Princeton to join the Stanford University faculty, where he became Fletcher Jones Professor of Computer Science in 1977. He became Professor of The Art of Computer Programming in 1990, and has been emeritus since 1993.

Writings

Knuth is a writer as well as a computer scientist.

''The Art of Computer Programming'' (''TAOCP'')

Main article: The Art of Computer Programming{{!}}''The Art of Computer Programming''

In the 1970s, Knuth called computer science "a totally new field with no real identity. And the standard of available publications was not that high. A lot of the papers coming out were quite simply wrong. ... So one of my motivations was to put straight a story that had been very badly told."

From 1972 to 1973, Knuth spent a year at the University of Oslo among people such as Ole-Johan Dahl. This is where he had originally intended to write the seventh volume in his book series, which was to deal with programming languages. But Knuth had finished only the first two volumes when he came to Oslo, and thus spent the year on the third volume, next to teaching. The third volume came out just after Knuth returned to Stanford in 1973.

Concrete Mathematics: A Foundation for Computer Science originated with an expansion of the mathematical preliminaries section of Volume 1 of TAoCP. Knuth found that there were mathematical tools necessary for Volume 1, but missing from his repertoire, and decided that a course introducing those tools to computer science students would be useful. Knuth introduced the course at Stanford in 1970. Course notes developed by Oren Patashnik evolved into the 1988 text, with authors Ronald Graham, Knuth, and Patashnik. A second edition of Concrete Mathematics was published in 1994.

By 2011, Volume 4A of TAoCP had been published. In April 2020, Knuth said he anticipated that Volume 4 of TAoCP will have at least parts A through F. Volume 4B was published in October 2022.

Other works

Knuth is also the author of Surreal Numbers, a mathematical novelette on John Horton Conway's set theory construction of an alternate system of numbers. Instead of simply explaining the subject, the book seeks to show the development of the mathematics. Knuth wanted the book to prepare students for doing original, creative research.

In 1995, Knuth wrote the foreword to the book A=B by Marko Petkovšek, Herbert Wilf and Doron Zeilberger. He also occasionally contributes language puzzles to Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics.

Knuth has delved into recreational mathematics. He contributed articles to the Journal of Recreational Mathematics beginning in the 1960s, and was acknowledged as a major contributor in Joseph Madachy's Mathematics on Vacation.

Knuth also appears in a number of Numberphile and Computerphile videos on YouTube, where he discusses topics from writing Surreal Numbers to why he does not use email.

Knuth had proposed the name "algorithmics" as a better name for the discipline of computer science.

Works about his religious beliefs

In addition to his writings on computer science, Knuth, a Lutheran, is also the author of 3:16 Bible Texts Illuminated, in which he examines the Bible by a process of systematic sampling, namely an analysis of chapter 3, verse 16 of each book. Each verse is accompanied by a rendering in calligraphic art, contributed by a group of calligraphers led by Hermann Zapf. Knuth was invited to give a set of lectures at MIT on the views on religion and computer science behind his 3:16 project, resulting in another book, Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About, where he published the lectures God and Computer Science.

Opinion on software patents

Knuth strongly opposes granting software patents to trivial solutions that should be obvious, but has expressed more nuanced views for nontrivial solutions such as the interior-point method of linear programming. He has expressed his disagreement directly to both the United States Patent and Trademark Office and European Patent Organisation.

Programming

Digital typesetting

In the 1970s, the publishers of TAOCP abandoned Monotype in favor of phototypesetting. Knuth became so frustrated with the inability of the latter system to approach the quality of the previous volumes, which were typeset using the older system, that he took time out to work on digital typesetting and created TeX and Metafont.

Literate programming

While developing TeX, Knuth created a new methodology of programming, which he called literate programming, because he believed that programmers should think of programs as works of literature:

Knuth embodied the idea of literate programming in the WEB system. The same WEB source is used to weave a TeX file, and to tangle a Pascal source file. These in their turn produce a readable description of the program and an executable binary respectively. A later iteration of the system, CWEB, replaces Pascal with C, C++, and Java.

Knuth used WEB to program TeX and METAFONT, and published both programs as books, both originally published the same year: TeX: The Program (1986); and METAFONT: The Program (1986). Around the same time, LaTeX, the now-widely adopted macro package based on TeX, was first developed by Leslie Lamport, who later published its first user manual in 1986.

Personal life

Donald Knuth married Nancy Jill Carter on 24 June 1961, while he was a graduate student at the California Institute of Technology. They have two children: John Martin Knuth and Jennifer Sierra Knuth.

Knuth gives informal lectures a few times a year at Stanford University, which he calls "Computer Musings". He was a visiting professor at the Oxford University Department of Computer Science in the United Kingdom until 2017 and an Honorary Fellow of Magdalen College.

Knuth is an organist and a composer. He and his father served as organists for Lutheran congregations. Knuth and his wife have a 16-rank organ in their home. In 2016 he completed a piece for organ, Fantasia Apocalyptica, which he calls a "translation of the Greek text of the Revelation of Saint John the Divine into music". It was premièred in Sweden on January 10, 2018.

Chinese name

Knuth's Chinese name is Gao Dena (). He was given this name in 1977 by Frances Yao shortly before making a three-week trip to China. In the 1980 Chinese translation of Volume 1 of The Art of Computer Programming (), Knuth explains that he embraced his Chinese name because he wanted to be known by the growing numbers of computer programmers in China at the time. In 1989, his Chinese name was placed atop the Journal of Computer Science and Technology header, which Knuth says "makes me feel close to all Chinese people although I cannot speak your language".

Humor

Knuth's reward checks

Knuth used to pay a finder's fee of $2.56 for any typographical errors or mistakes discovered in his books, because "256 pennies is one hexadecimal dollar", and $0.32 for "valuable suggestions". According to an article in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Technology Review, these Knuth reward checks are "among computerdom's most prized trophies". Knuth had to stop sending real checks in 2008 due to bank fraud, and now gives each error finder a "certificate of deposit" from a publicly listed balance in his fictitious "Bank of San Serriffe".

He once warned a correspondent, "Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it."

Knuth published his first "scientific" article in a school magazine in 1957 under the title "The Potrzebie System of Weights and Measures". In it, he defined the fundamental unit of length as the thickness of Mad No. 26, and named the fundamental unit of force "whatmeworry". Mad published the article in issue No. 33 (June 1957).

To demonstrate the concept of recursion, Knuth intentionally referred "Circular definition" and "Definition, circular" to each other in the index of The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 1.

The preface of Concrete Mathematics has the following paragraph:

At the TUG 2010 Conference, Knuth announced a satirical XML-based successor to TeX, titled "iTeX" (, spoken while ringing a bell), which would support features such as arbitrarily scaled irrational units, 3D printing, input from seismographs and heart monitors, animation, and stereophonic sound.

Awards and honors

In 1971, Knuth received the first ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award. He has received various other awards, including the Turing Award, the National Medal of Science, the John von Neumann Medal, and the Kyoto Prize.

Knuth was elected a Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society (DFBCS) in 1980 in recognition of his contributions to the field of computer science.

In 1990, he was awarded the one-of-a-kind academic title Professor of The Art of Computer Programming; the title has since been revised to Professor Emeritus of The Art of Computer Programming.

Knuth was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1975. He was also elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 1981 for organizing vast subject areas of computer science so that they are accessible to all segments of the computing community. In 1992, he became an associate of the French Academy of Sciences. Also that year, he retired from regular research and teaching at Stanford University in order to finish The Art of Computer Programming. He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 2003.

Knuth was elected as a Fellow (first class of Fellows) of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics in 2009 for his outstanding contributions to mathematics. He is a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society and a member of the American Philosophical Society. Other awards and honors include:

  • First ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award, 1971
  • Turing Award, 1974
  • Lester R. Ford Award, 1975 and 1993
  • Josiah Willard Gibbs Lecturer, 1978
  • National Medal of Science, 1979
  • Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement, 1985
  • Franklin Medal, 1988
  • John von Neumann Medal, 1995
  • Harvey Prize from the Technion, 1995
  • Kyoto Prize, 1996
  • Fellow of the Computer History Museum "for his fundamental early work in the history of computing algorithms, development of the TeX typesetting language, and for major contributions to mathematics and computer science." 1998
  • Asteroid 21656 Knuth, named in his honor in May 2001
  • Katayanagi Prize, 2010
  • BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in the category of Information and Communication Technologies, 2010
  • Turing Lecture, 2011
  • Stanford University School of Engineering Hero Award, 2011
  • Flajolet Lecture Prize, 2014

Publications

A short list of his publications include:

The Art of Computer Programming: 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1.

Computers and Typesetting (all books are hardcover unless otherwise noted):

  1. , x+483pp.
  2. (softcover).
  3. , xviii+600pp.
  4. , xii+361pp.
  5. (softcover).
  6. , xviii+566pp.
  7. , xvi+588pp.

Books of collected papers: 1. 1. 1. 1.

  1. , (paperback)
  2. , (paperback)
  3. Donald E. Knuth, Selected Papers on Design of Algorithms (Stanford, California: Center for the Study of Language and Information—CSLI Lecture Notes, no. 191), 2010. (cloth), (paperback)
  4. Donald E. Knuth, Selected Papers on Fun and Games (Stanford, California: Center for the Study of Language and Information—CSLI Lecture Notes, no. 192), 2011. (cloth), (paperback)
  5. Donald E. Knuth, Companion to the Papers of Donald Knuth (Stanford, California: Center for the Study of Language and Information—CSLI Lecture Notes, no. 202), 2011. (cloth), (paperback)

Other books:

  1. xiv+657 pp.
  2. Donald E. Knuth, The Stanford GraphBase: A Platform for Combinatorial Computing (New York, ACM Press) 1993. second paperback printing 2009.
  3. Donald E. Knuth, 3:16 Bible Texts Illuminated (Madison, Wisconsin: A-R Editions), 1990.
  4. Donald E. Knuth, Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About (Center for the Study of Language and Information—CSLI Lecture Notes no 136), 2001.
  5. Donald E. Knuth, MMIXware: A RISC Computer for the Third Millennium (Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag— Lecture Notes in Computer Science, no. 1750), 1999. viii+550pp.
  6. Donald E. Knuth and Silvio Levy, The CWEB System of Structured Documentation (Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley), 1993. iv+227pp. . Third printing 2001 with hypertext support, ii + 237 pp.
  7. Donald E. Knuth, Tracy L. Larrabee, and Paul M. Roberts, Mathematical Writing (Washington, D.C.: Mathematical Association of America), 1989. ii+115pp
  8. Daniel H. Greene and Donald E. Knuth, Mathematics for the Analysis of Algorithms (Boston: Birkhäuser), 1990. viii+132pp.
  9. Donald E. Knuth, Mariages Stables: et leurs relations avec d'autres problèmes combinatoires (Montréal: Les Presses de l'Université de Montréal), 1976. 106pp.
  10. Donald E. Knuth, Stable Marriage and Its Relation to Other Combinatorial Problems: An Introduction to the Mathematical Analysis of Algorithms.
  11. Donald E. Knuth, Axioms and Hulls (Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag—Lecture Notes in Computer Science, no. 606), 1992. ix+109pp.

References

References

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  3. Karp, Richard M.. (February 1986). "Combinatorics, Complexity, and Randomness". Communications of the ACM.
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  5. Molly Knight Raskin. (2013). "No Better Time: The Brief, Remarkable Life of Danny Lewin--the Genius who Transformed the Internet". Da Capo Press, Incorporated.
  6. [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-minneapolis-star/176453787/ Advertisement], ''[[Minneapolis Star]]'', February 13, 1952, page 59.
  7. (2007). "Oral History of Donald Knuth".
  8. (1998). "Out of their minds: the lives and discoveries of 15 great computer scientists". Springer.
  9. (2011). "Selected Papers on Fun and Games". Center for the Study of Language and Information—CSLI Lecture Notes, no. 192.
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  11. Koshy, Thomas. (2004). "Discrete mathematics with applications". Academic Press.
  12. Lyons, Keith. (September 25, 2018). "Donald Knuth, basketball and computers in sport". Clyde Street Archive.
  13. "Beta Nu of Theta Chi, History of Beta Nu Chapter". [[CWRU]].
  14. "Beta Nu, Theta Chi". [[Theta Chi]].
  15. Walden, David. "Donald E. Knuth - A.M. Turing Award Laureate".
  16. "Stories About the B5000 and People Who Were There".
  17. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (1963). "Finite Semifields and Projective Planes". [[California Institute of Technology]].
  18. "The Birth of Object Orientation: the Simula Languages".
  19. "Biography".
  20. "Interview with Richard Nance 2013".
  21. "The Birth of Object Orientation: the Simula Languages".
  22. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (2019-08-03). "The Art of Computer Programming (TAOCP)".
  23. (2021-08-27). "Institute for Defense Analyses".
  24. D'Agostino, Susan. (2020-04-16). "The Computer Scientist Who Can't Stop Telling Stories". [[Quanta Magazine]].
  25. (2019-06-21). "Timeline".
  26. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Home page". [[Stanford University]].
  27. "Donald Knuth". Stanford University.
  28. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Curriculum vitae". Stanford University.
  29. "BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Awards".
  30. (1997). "Publikasjonen "Datahistorien ved Universitetet i Oslo - Institutt for informatikk 1977 - 1997" utgitt".
  31. Zeilberg. "DEK". Rutgers.
  32. "The Linguist List -- Journal Page".
  33. Madachy, Joseph S.,''Mathematics on Vacation'', Thomas Nelson & Sons Ltd. 1966
  34. "Videos about Numbers and Stuff". [[Numberphile]].
  35. Numberphile. (2016-06-27). "Surreal Numbers (writing the first book) - Numberphile".
  36. Computerphile. (2015-08-21). "Why Don Knuth Doesn't Use Email - Computerphile".
  37. (1992). "Philosophy and the Computer". Taylor & Francis.
  38. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (1991). "3:16 : Bible texts illuminated". A-R Eds.
  39. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (2001). "Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About". Center for the Study of Language and Information Publications.
  40. (March 2002). "All Questions Answered". Notices of the AMS.
  41. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Against software patents".
  42. "February 1994 letter to the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Washington, DC".
  43. Knuth, Donald Erwin. (1997). "Digital Typography (Kyoto Prize Lecture, 1996)".
  44. Knuth, Donald Erwin. (1984). "Literate Programming".
  45. "Knuth and Levy: CWEB".
  46. Knuth, Donald. (2019-04-11). "Knuth: Computers and Typesetting".
  47. Lamport, Leslie. (1986). "LATEX : a document preparation system". Addison-Wesley Pub. Co.
  48. (2015). "Donald Ervin Knuth". [[University of St Andrews]].
  49. "Professor Donald Knuth". Magdalen College.
  50. (October 30, 2014). "Notices". [[Oxford University Gazette]].
  51. "The Organ of Don and Jill Knuth".
  52. de Groot, Martin. (November 3, 2018). "Arts and Culture: A polymath brings his genius to bear on a multimedia work for pipe organ". [[Waterloo Region Record]].
  53. "A brief history of TeX, volume II". [[TUGboat]].
  54. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Frequently Asked Questions". [[Stanford University]].
  55. (1980). "计算机程序设计技巧 (Ji suan ji cheng xu she ji ji qiao)". Defense Industry Publishing Co..
  56. "Rewriting the Bible in 0s and 1s". [[Technology Review]].
  57. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (June 1957). "The Potrzebie System of Weights & Measures".
  58. Kidder, Tracy. (2016). "A Truck Full of Money". [[Random House]].
  59. Knuth, Don. (2010). "TUG 2010". Zeeba TV.
  60. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "An Earth-shaking announcement". Zeeba TV.
  61. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (2010). "An Earthshaking Announcement". [[TUGboat]].
  62. Anon. (2016). "Roll of Distinguished Fellows". British Computer Society.
  63. (2009). "Fellows". Siam.
  64. "Gruppe 1: Matematiske fag". [[Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters]].
  65. "Fellows of the American Mathematical Society".
  66. "APS Member History".
  67. Knuth, D. E.. (1974). "Computer science and its relation to mathematics". Amer. Math. Monthly.
  68. Knuth, D. E.. (1992). "Two notes on notation". Amer. Math. Monthly.
  69. "Josiah Willard Gibbs Lectures".
  70. Knuth, Donald E.. (1979). "Mathematical typography". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.).
  71. "The President's National Medal of Science: Recipient Details - NSF - National Science Foundation".
  72. "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". [[American Academy of Achievement]].
  73. (1995). "Harvey". Technion.
  74. (2015). "Donald Knuth: 1998 Fellow". [[Computer History Museum]].
  75. "Katayanagi". CMU.
  76. Galardonados. (2010). "Fronteras". FBBVA.
  77. Myers, Andrew. (June 1, 2001). "Stanford's Don Knuth, a pioneering hero of computer programming". Stanford Report.
  78. Knuth, Donald. "Problems That Philippe Would Have Loved". Stanford University.
  79. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Books". Home page.
  80. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Literate Programming". Home page.
  81. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Computer Science". Home page.
  82. Knuth, Donald Ervin. (1983). "Digital Typography". Scientific American.
  83. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Analysis of Algorithms". Home page.
  84. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Computer Languages". Home page.
  85. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Discrete Mathematics". Home page.
  86. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Design of Algorithms". Home page.
  87. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Selected Papers on Fun and Games". Home page.
  88. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Companion to the Papers of Donald Knuth". Home page.
  89. Knuth, Donald Ervin. "Surreal numbers". Home page.
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