A Science of Operations: Machines, Logic and the Invention of Programming

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Today, computers fulfil a dazzling array of roles, a flexibility resulting from the great range of programsthat can be run on them.

A Science of Operations examines the history of what we now call programming, defined not simply as computer programming, but more broadly as the definition of the steps involved in computations and other information-processing activities. This unique perspective highlights how the history of programming is distinct from the history of the computer, despite the close relationship between the two in the 20th century. The book also discusses how the development of programming languages is related to disparate fields which attempted to give a mechanical account of language on the one hand, and a linguistic account of machines on the other.

Topics and features:

  • Covers the early development of automatic computing, including Babbage’s “mechanical calculating engines” and the applications of punched-card technology
  • Examines the theoretical work of mathematical logicians such as Kleene, Church, Post and Turing, and the machines built by Zuse and Aiken in the 1930s and 1940s
  • Discusses the role that logic played in the development of the stored program computer
  • Describes the “standard model” of machine-code programming popularised by Maurice Wilkes
  • Presents the complete table for the universal Turing machine in the Appendices
  • Investigates the rise of the initiatives aimed at developing higher-level programming notations, and how these came to be thought of as ‘languages’ that could be studied independently of a machine
  • Examines the importance of the Algol 60 language, and the framework it provided for studying the design of programming languages and the process of software development
  • Explores the early development of object-oriented languages, with a focus on the Smalltalk project

This fascinating text offers a new viewpoint for historians of science and technology, as well as for the general reader. The historical narrative builds the story in a clear and logical fashion, roughly following chronological order.

Author(s): Mark Priestley (auth.)
Series: History of Computing
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag London
Year: 2011

Language: English
Pages: 342
Tags: History of Computing

Front Matter....Pages I-IX
Introduction....Pages 1-15
Babbage’s Engines....Pages 17-51
Semi-Automatic Computing....Pages 53-65
Logic, Computability and Formal Systems....Pages 67-98
Automating Control....Pages 99-121
Logic and the Invention of the Computer....Pages 123-155
Machine Code Programming and Logic....Pages 157-183
The Invention of Programming Languages....Pages 185-224
The Algol Research Programme....Pages 225-252
The Logic of Correctness in Software Engineering....Pages 253-276
The Unification of Data and Algorithms....Pages 277-296
Conclusions....Pages 297-306
Back Matter....Pages 307-341