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- From: fry@tara.harvard.edu (David Fry)
- Newsgroups: comp.theory
- Subject: Re: Are Knuth's "Art of Computer Programming" books s
- Keywords: Knuth books
- Message-ID: <1992Dec17.021254.18601@husc3.harvard.edu>
- Date: 17 Dec 92 07:12:53 GMT
- Article-I.D.: husc3.1992Dec17.021254.18601
- References: <1992Dec16.231320.12021@tellab5.tellabs.com>
- Organization: Harvard Math Department
- Lines: 30
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tara.harvard.edu
-
- In article <1992Dec16.231320.12021@tellab5.tellabs.com> jab@tellabs.com (Jeff Brooks) writes:
- >I've recently completed my first couple of classed towards a Masters in CS
- >and was told by one of my professors that Knuth's multi-volume set of books
- >"The Art of Computer Programming" are THE classic computer science books.
- >
- >My questions are, are these books still worth reading or are they outdated?
- >The copy of volume 1 I found has a copyright date of 1973, so, should I
- >just read them as a historical reference or is most of the technical content
- >still applicable to today's programming methods?
- >
- >Thanks in advance for your opinion or any other references that you can
- >recommend instead.
-
- I believe the Knuth books are the greatest books I've ever seen.
- I'm continually amazed by their breadth, depth, and outright
- scholarship. They're a remarkable accomplishment and I hope the
- fourth volume comes out soon.
-
- I'm sure they're a tad dated now, maybe reflecting a mindset that is
- not entirely modern, rather than filled with material that is better
- understood now. And certainly some modern topics are missing or
- under-represented, such as parallel programming. But if you read
- those books, and complete the exercises, I think you'll be very
- well prepared to tackle any problem. And, yes, 99% of the material is
- still applicable to current day-to-day programming.
-
- David Fry fry@math.harvard.edu
- Division of Applied Sciences fry@huma1.bitnet
- Harvard University ...!harvard!huma1!fry
- Cambridge, MA 02138
-