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  1. May 1, 2024 · Tony Hoare (born January 11, 1934, Colombo, Sri Lanka) is a British computer scientist and winner of the 1980 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for “his fundamental contributions to the definition and design of programming languages .”. In 1956 Hoare earned a bachelor’s degree in classics from the University of ...

    • William L. Hosch
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tony_HoareTony Hoare - Wikipedia

    Tony Hoare. Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare FRS FREng, [3] also known as Tony Hoare or by his initials C. A. R. Hoare ( / hɔːr /; born 11 January 1934) is a British computer scientist who has made foundational contributions to programming languages, algorithms, operating systems, formal verification, and concurrent computing. [4]

    • C. A. R. Hoare
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  4. Video Interview. “Tony” Hoare, as he is universally known, was named Charles Antony Richard Hoare when born on 11 January 1934 in the city of Colombo in what was Ceylon but is now Sri Lanka. Tony's parents were involved in the business of what was then the British Empire. Tony received secondary education at the Dragon School in Oxford and ...

  5. Tony Hoare's interest in computing was awakened in the early fifties, when he studied philosophy (together with Latin and Greek) at Oxford University, under the tutelage of John Lucas. He was fascinated by the power of mathematical logic as an explanation of the apparent certainty of mathematical truth. During his National Service (1956-1958 ...

  6. Tony Hoare’s contributions to the theory and practice of concurrent software systems are equally impressive. The process algebra called Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) has been one of the fundamental paradigms, both as a mathematical theory to reason about concurrent computation as well as the basis for the programming language occam.

  7. subject: Classics and Philosophy. 1956. graduate course in statistics at Oxford. 1957 – 1958. National Service with the Royal Navy. 1958 – 1960. Moscow State University (Kolmogorov) subject: Computer translation of human languages. 1960 – 1968. Work at Elliott Brothers, Computer Manufacture. 1968 – 1977. Professor at Queen’s ...

  8. In 1969, Professor Hoare made yet another contribution to the definition and design of programming languages by employing techniques now popularly referred to as Hoare’s Logic. The brainchild of his profound insight and originality, this powerful yet elegant achievement marked a milestone in the history of software science and helped ...

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