Keith Gorlen
On this page
Keith E. Gorlen,
an American computer scientist and biomedical engineer at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), pioneer in object-oriented programming, data abstraction and the C++ programming language, and author and co-author of the C++ NIH class library [1] [2] and various papers and books on those topics.
Photos & Games
ACM 1970,
Chess 3.0 -
Coko III after 8. Qxd2, from left:
Jacques Dutka (Tournament Director), unknown,
Keith Gorlen operating Chess 3.0,
Monty Newborn,
Steven M. Bellovin with phone, unknown back of head [5]
Selected Publications
- David Slate, Larry Atkin, Keith Gorlen (1971). CHESS 3.5 User Guide. Northwestern University
- Keith Gorlen (1987). An Object-Oriented Class Library for C++ Programs. C++ Workshop 1987, pp. 181-208
- Keith Gorlen, Sanford M. Orlow, Perry S. Plexico (1990). Data abstraction and object-oriented programming in C++. Wiley [7]
- Andrew Koenig, Thomas A. Cargill, Keith Gorlen, Robert B. Murray, Michael Vilot (1991). How Useful is Multiple Inheritance in C++? C++ Conference 1991
- Keith Gorlen (2012). Unique Identifier for People: Best Community Practice v1.2. NIH, pdf
References
- ↑ NIH Class Library — Software Preservation Group, The Computer History Museum
- ↑ NIH Class Library Revision 3.0 - Release Notes (pdf)
- ↑ Undergraduate Alumni Honor Roll 1970s
- ↑ David Slate, Larry Atkin (1977). Chess 4.5 - The Northwestern University Chess Program. Chess Skill in Man and Machine, reprinted (1988) in Computer Chess Compendium
- ↑ John C. Devlin (1970). Chess Computer Loses Game in a King‐Size Blunder. New York Times, September 02, 1970, Thanks to Monty Newborn for recognizing people
- ↑ DBLP: Keith E. Gorlen
- ↑ NIH Class Library — Software Preservation Group, The Computer History Museum
Prev
Kei TakadaNext
Keith H. Randall