Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
23ae5ee5 C |
1 | %A L. P. Deutsch |
2 | %A B. W. Lampson | |
3 | %T An online editor | |
4 | %J Comm. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
5 | %V 10 | |
6 | %N 12 | |
7 | %D December 1967 | |
8 | %P 793-799, 803 | |
9 | %K qed | |
10 | ||
11 | .[ | |
12 | %r 17 | |
13 | %K cstr | |
14 | %R Comp. Sci. Tech. Rep. No. 17 | |
15 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
16 | %C Murray Hill, New Jersey | |
17 | %A B. W. Kernighan | |
18 | %A L. L. Cherry | |
19 | %T A System for Typesetting Mathematics | |
20 | %d May 1974, revised April 1977 | |
21 | %J Comm. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
22 | %K acm cacm | |
23 | %V 18 | |
24 | %P 151-157 | |
25 | %D March 1975 | |
26 | .] | |
27 | ||
28 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System: Document Preparation | |
29 | %K unix bstj | |
30 | %A B. W. Kernighan | |
31 | %A M. E. Lesk | |
32 | %A J. F. Ossanna | |
33 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
34 | %V 57 | |
35 | %N 6 | |
36 | %P 2115-2135 | |
37 | %D 1978 | |
38 | ||
39 | %A T. A. Dolotta | |
40 | %A J. R. Mashey | |
41 | %T An Introduction to the Programmer's Workbench | |
42 | %J Proc. 2nd Int. Conf. on Software Engineering | |
43 | %D October 13-15, 1976 | |
44 | %P 164-168 | |
45 | ||
46 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System: The Programmer's Workbench | |
47 | %A T. A. Dolotta | |
48 | %A R. C. Haight | |
49 | %A J. R. Mashey | |
50 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
51 | %V 57 | |
52 | %N 6 | |
53 | %P 2177-2200 | |
54 | %D 1978 | |
55 | %K unix bstj | |
56 | ||
57 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System: U\s-2NIX\s0 on a Microprocessor | |
58 | %K unix bstj | |
59 | %A H. Lycklama | |
60 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
61 | %V 57 | |
62 | %N 6 | |
63 | %P 2087-2101 | |
64 | %D 1978 | |
65 | ||
66 | %T The C Programming Language | |
67 | %A B. W. Kernighan | |
68 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
69 | %I Prentice-Hall | |
70 | %C Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey | |
71 | %D 1978 | |
72 | ||
73 | %T Computer Recreations | |
74 | %A Aleph-null | |
75 | %J Software Practice and Experience | |
76 | %V 1 | |
77 | %N 2 | |
78 | %D April-June 1971 | |
79 | %P 201-204 | |
80 | ||
81 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System: The U\s-2NIX\s0 Shell | |
82 | %A S. R. Bourne | |
83 | %K unix bstj | |
84 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
85 | %V 57 | |
86 | %N 6 | |
87 | %P 1971-1990 | |
88 | %D 1978 | |
89 | ||
90 | %A L. P. Deutsch | |
91 | %A B. W. Lampson | |
92 | %T \*sSDS\*n 930 time-sharing system preliminary reference manual | |
93 | %R Doc. 30.10.10, Project \*sGENIE\*n | |
94 | %C Univ. Cal. at Berkeley | |
95 | %D April 1965 | |
96 | ||
97 | %A R. J. Feiertag | |
98 | %A E. I. Organick | |
99 | %T The Multics input-output system | |
100 | %J Proc. Third Symposium on Operating Systems Principles | |
101 | %D October 18-20, 1971 | |
102 | %P 35-41 | |
103 | ||
104 | %A D. G. Bobrow | |
105 | %A J. D. Burchfiel | |
106 | %A D. L. Murphy | |
107 | %A R. S. Tomlinson | |
108 | %T \*sTENEX\*n, a Paged Time Sharing System for the \*sPDP\*n-10 | |
109 | %J Comm. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
110 | %V 15 | |
111 | %N 3 | |
112 | %D March 1972 | |
113 | %K tenex | |
114 | %P 135-143 | |
115 | ||
116 | %A R. E. Griswold | |
117 | %A D. R. Hanson | |
118 | %T An Overview of SL5 | |
119 | %J SIGPLAN Notices | |
120 | %V 12 | |
121 | %N 4 | |
122 | %D April 1977 | |
123 | %P 40-50 | |
124 | ||
125 | %A E. W. Dijkstra | |
126 | %T Cooperating Sequential Processes | |
127 | %B Programming Languages | |
128 | %E F. Genuys | |
129 | %I Academic Press | |
130 | %C New York | |
131 | %D 1968 | |
132 | %P 43-112 | |
133 | ||
134 | %A J. A. Hawley | |
135 | %A W. B. Meyer | |
136 | %T M\s-2UNIX\s0, A Multiprocessing Version of U\s-2NIX\s0 | |
137 | %K munix unix | |
138 | %R M.S. Thesis | |
139 | %I Naval Postgraduate School | |
140 | %C Monterey, Cal. | |
141 | %D 1975 | |
142 | ||
143 | %T The U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System | |
144 | %K unix bstj | |
145 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
146 | %A K. Thompson | |
147 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
148 | %V 57 | |
149 | %N 6 | |
150 | %P 1905-1929 | |
151 | %D 1978 | |
152 | ||
153 | %A E. I. Organick | |
154 | %T The M\s-2ULTICS\s0 System | |
155 | %K multics | |
156 | %I M.I.T. Press | |
157 | %C Cambridge, Mass. | |
158 | %D 1972 | |
159 | ||
160 | %T UNIX for Beginners | |
161 | %A B. W. Kernighan | |
162 | %D 1978 | |
163 | ||
164 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Programmer's Man\&ual | |
165 | %A K. Thompson | |
166 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
167 | %K unix | |
168 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
169 | %O Seventh Edition. | |
170 | %D 1978 | |
171 | ||
172 | %A K. Thompson | |
173 | %T The U\s-2NIX\s0 Command Language | |
174 | %B Structured Programming\(emInfotech State of the Art Report | |
175 | %I Infotech International Ltd. | |
176 | %C Nicholson House, Maidenhead, Berkshire, England | |
177 | %D March 1975 | |
178 | %P 375-384 | |
179 | %K unix | |
180 | %X pwb | |
181 | Brief description of shell syntax and semantics, without much | |
182 | detail on implementation. | |
183 | Much on pipes and convenience of hooking programs together. | |
184 | Includes SERMONETTE: | |
185 | "Many familiar computing `concepts' are missing from UNIX. | |
186 | Files have no records. There are no access methods. | |
187 | There are no file types. These concepts fill a much-needed gap. | |
188 | I sincerely hope that when future systems are designed by | |
189 | manufacturers the value of some of these ingrained notions is re-examined. | |
190 | Like the politician and his `common man', manufacturers have | |
191 | their `average user'. | |
192 | ||
193 | %A J. R. Mashey | |
194 | %T PWB/UNIX Shell Tutorial | |
195 | %D September 30, 1977 | |
196 | ||
197 | %A D. F. Hartley (Ed.) | |
198 | %T The Cambridge Multiple Access System \- Users Reference Manual | |
199 | %I University Mathematical Laboratory | |
200 | %C Cambridge, England | |
201 | %D 1968 | |
202 | ||
203 | %A P. A. Crisman (Ed.) | |
204 | %T The Compatible Time-Sharing System | |
205 | %I M.I.T. Press | |
206 | %K whole ctss book | |
207 | %C Cambridge, Mass. | |
208 | %D 1965 | |
209 | ||
210 | %T LR Parsing | |
211 | %A A. V. Aho | |
212 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
213 | %J Comp. Surveys | |
214 | %V 6 | |
215 | %N 2 | |
216 | %P 99-124 | |
217 | %D June 1974 | |
218 | ||
219 | %T Deterministic Parsing of Ambiguous Grammars | |
220 | %A A. V. Aho | |
221 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
222 | %A J. D. Ullman | |
223 | %J Comm. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
224 | %K acm cacm | |
225 | %V 18 | |
226 | %N 8 | |
227 | %P 441-452 | |
228 | %D August 1975 | |
229 | ||
230 | %A A. V. Aho | |
231 | %A J. D. Ullman | |
232 | %T Principles of Compiler Design | |
233 | %I Addison-Wesley | |
234 | %C Reading, Mass. | |
235 | %D 1977 | |
236 | ||
237 | .[ | |
238 | %r 65 | |
239 | %R Comp. Sci. Tech. Rep. No. 65 | |
240 | %K CSTR | |
241 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
242 | %T Lint, a C Program Checker | |
243 | %D December 1977 | |
244 | %O updated version TM 78-1273-3 | |
245 | %D 1978 | |
246 | .] | |
247 | ||
248 | %T A Portable Compiler: Theory and Practice | |
249 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
250 | %J Proc. 5th ACM Symp. on Principles of Programming Languages | |
251 | %P 97-104 | |
252 | %D January 1978 | |
253 | ||
254 | .[ | |
255 | %r 39 | |
256 | %K CSTR | |
257 | %R Comp. Sci. Tech. Rep. No. 39 | |
258 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
259 | %C Murray Hill, New Jersey | |
260 | %A M. E. Lesk | |
261 | %T Lex \(em A Lexical Analyzer Generator | |
262 | %D October 1975 | |
263 | .] | |
264 | ||
265 | .[ | |
266 | %r 32 | |
267 | %K CSTR | |
268 | %R Comp. Sci. Tech. Rep. No. 32 | |
269 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
270 | %C Murray Hill, New Jersey | |
271 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
272 | %T Yacc \(em Yet Another Compiler-Compiler | |
273 | %D July 1975 | |
274 | .] | |
275 | ||
276 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Time-Sharing System: Portability of C Programs and the U\s-2NIX\s0 System | |
277 | %K unix bstj | |
278 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
279 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
280 | %J Bell Sys. Tech. J. | |
281 | %V 57 | |
282 | %N 6 | |
283 | %P 2021-2048 | |
284 | %D 1978 | |
285 | ||
286 | %T Typing Documents on UNIX and GCOS: The -ms Macros for Troff | |
287 | %A M. E. Lesk | |
288 | %D 1977 | |
289 | ||
290 | %A K. Thompson | |
291 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
292 | %T U\s-2NIX\s0 Programmer's Manual | |
293 | %K unix | |
294 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
295 | %O Sixth Edition | |
296 | %D May 1975 | |
297 | ||
298 | %T The Network U\s-2NIX\s0 System | |
299 | %K unix | |
300 | %A G. L. Chesson | |
301 | %J Operating Systems Review | |
302 | %V 9 | |
303 | %N 5 | |
304 | %P 60-66 | |
305 | %D 1975 | |
306 | %O Also in \f2Proc. 5th Symp. on Operating Systems Principles.\f1 | |
307 | ||
308 | %T Spider \(em An Experimental Data Communications System | |
309 | %Z ctr127 | |
310 | %A A. G. Fraser | |
311 | %J Proc. IEEE Conf. on Communications | |
312 | %P 21F | |
313 | %O IEEE Cat. No. 74CH0859-9-CSCB. | |
314 | %D June 1974 | |
315 | ||
316 | %T A Virtual Channel Network | |
317 | %A A. G. Fraser | |
318 | %J Datamation | |
319 | %P 51-56 | |
320 | %D February 1975 | |
321 | ||
322 | .[ | |
323 | %r 41 | |
324 | %K CSTR | |
325 | %R Comp. Sci. Tech. Rep. No. 41 | |
326 | %I Bell Laboratories | |
327 | %C Murray Hill, New Jersey | |
328 | %A J. W. Hunt | |
329 | %A M. D. McIlroy | |
330 | %T An Algorithm for Differential File Comparison | |
331 | %D June 1976 | |
332 | .] | |
333 | ||
334 | %A F. P. Brooks, Jr. | |
335 | %T The Mythical Man-Month | |
336 | %I Addison-Wesley | |
337 | %C Reading, Mass. | |
338 | %D 1975 | |
339 | %X pwb | |
340 | Readable, classic reference on software engineering and | |
341 | problems of large projects, from someone with experience in them. | |
342 | Required reading for any software engineer, even if conclusions may not | |
343 | always be agreed with. | |
344 | %br | |
345 | "The second is the most dangerous system a man every designs." p.55. | |
346 | %br | |
347 | "Hence plan to throw one away; you will, anyhow." p.116. | |
348 | %br | |
349 | "Cosgrove has perceptively pointed out that the programmer delivers | |
350 | satisfaction of a user need rather than any tangible product. | |
351 | And both the actual need and the user's perception of that need | |
352 | will change as programs are built, tested, and used." p.117. | |
353 | %br | |
354 | "The total cost of maintaining a widely used program is typically 40 percent | |
355 | or more of the cost of developing it." p.121. | |
356 | %br | |
357 | "As shown above, amalgamating prose and program reduces the total | |
358 | number of characters to be stored." p.175. | |
359 | ||
360 | %T A Portable Compiler for the Language C | |
361 | %A A. Snyder | |
362 | %I Master's Thesis, M.I.T. | |
363 | %C Cambridge, Mass. | |
364 | %D 1974 | |
365 | ||
366 | %T The C Language Calling Sequence | |
367 | %A M. E. Lesk | |
368 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
369 | %A D. M. Ritchie | |
370 | %D 1977 | |
371 | ||
372 | %T Optimal Code Generation for Expression Trees | |
373 | %A A. V. Aho | |
374 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
375 | %D 1975 | |
376 | %J J. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
377 | %K acm jacm | |
378 | %V 23 | |
379 | %N 3 | |
380 | %P 488-501 | |
381 | %O Also in \f2Proc. ACM Symp. on Theory of Computing,\f1 pp. 207-217, 1975. | |
382 | ||
383 | %A R. Sethi | |
384 | %A J. D. Ullman | |
385 | %T The Generation of Optimal Code for Arithmetic Expressions | |
386 | %J J. Assoc. Comp. Mach. | |
387 | %K acm jacm | |
388 | %V 17 | |
389 | %N 4 | |
390 | %D October 1970 | |
391 | %P 715-728 | |
392 | %O Reprinted as pp. 229-247 in \fICompiler Techniques\fR, ed. B. W. Pollack, Auerbach, Princeton NJ (1972). | |
393 | %X pwb | |
394 | Optimal approach for straight-line, fixed | |
395 | number of regs. | |
396 | ||
397 | %T Code Generation for Machines with Multiregister | |
398 | Operations | |
399 | %A A. V. Aho | |
400 | %A S. C. Johnson | |
401 | %A J. D. Ullman | |
402 | %J Proc. 4th ACM Symp. on Principles of Programming Languages | |
403 | %P 21-28 | |
404 | %D January 1977 | |
405 |