Rod Burstall facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Rod Burstall
|
|
---|---|
Born | November 1934 Liverpool, England
|
(age 90)
Alma mater | University of Cambridge Birmingham University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer science |
Institutions | University of Edinburgh |
Doctoral advisor | N. A. Dudley K. Brian Haley |
Doctoral students | Thorsten Altenkirch John Darlington Mike Gordon Conor McBride J Strother Moore Alan Mycroft Gordon Plotkin Don Sannella |
Rodney Martineau "Rod" Burstall FRSE (born 1934) is a British computer scientist and one of four founders of the Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science at the University of Edinburgh.
Biography
Burstall studied physics at the University of Cambridge, then an M.Sc. in operational research at Birmingham University. He worked for three years before returning to Birmingham University to earn a Ph.D. in 1966 with thesis titled Heuristic and Decision Tree Methods on Computers: Some Operational Research Applications under the supervision of N. A. Dudley and K. B. Haley.
Burstall was an early and influential proponent of functional programming, pattern matching, and list comprehension, and is known for his work with Robin Popplestone on POP, an innovative programming language developed at Edinburgh around 1970, and later work with John Darlington on NPL and program transformation and with David MacQueen and Don Sannella on Hope, a precursor to Standard ML, Miranda, and Haskell.
In 1995, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Burstall retired in 2000, becoming Professor Emeritus.
In 2002 David Rydeheard and Don Sannella assembled a festschrift for Rod Burstall that was published in Formal Aspects of Computing.
In 2009, he was awarded the ACM SIGPLAN Programming Language Achievement Award.
Books
- May 1971: Programming in POP-11, Edinburgh University Press.
- 1980: (with Alan Bundy) Artificial Intelligence: An Introductory Course, Edinburgh University Press.
- 1988: (with D. E. Rydeheard) Computational Category Theory, Prentice-Hall, ISBN: 978-0131627369.