P. J. Plauger Explained

P.J. Plauger
Birth Name:Phillip James Plauger
Birth Date:13 January 1944
Birth Place:Petersburg, West Virginia
Occupation:Entrepreneur and writer
Alma Mater:
  • Princeton University
  • Michigan State University
Genre:Science fiction
Notableworks:"Child of All Ages"
Awards:John W. Campbell Award (1975)

Phillip James (P.J. or Bill) Plauger[1] (; born January 13, 1944, Petersburg, West Virginia) is an author, entrepreneur and computer programmer. He has written and co-written articles and books about programming style, software tools, and the C programming language, as well as works of science fiction.

Personal life and career

Plauger worked at Bell Labs from 1969 to 1975,[2] where he coauthored Elements of Programming Style and Software Tools with Brian Kernighan. In 1978, he founded Whitesmiths, the first company to sell a C compiler and Unix-like operating system (Idris). He has since been involved in C and C++ standardization and is now the president of Dinkumware. In January 2009 he became the convener of the ISO C++ standards committee, but in October 2009 he tendered his resignation after failing to pass a resolution to stop processing any new features in order to facilitate the promised shipping date for the C++0x standard.[3] [4]

Plauger has been credited with inventing pair programming while leading Whitesmiths Ltd.[5]

Plauger has written a number of science fiction stories, notably "Child of All Ages", first published in the March 1975 issue of Analog, which features a protagonist who has achieved immortality at the cost of never growing beyond childhood. The story was nominated for the Hugo and Nebula awards in 1976. Plauger won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1975—notably beating John Varley for the award—and subsequently sold a story to The Last Dangerous Visions.

Plauger holds a bachelor's degree in physics from Princeton University and a PhD in nuclear physics from Michigan State University.[6]

Dinkumware

Dinkumware Limited
Type:Private
Location:Concord, Massachusetts, US
Key People:P.J. Plauger, Pete Becker
Industry:Software
Products:Dinkum C++ library
Dinkum C++ Library Reference
Dinkum C Library Reference
Dinkum CoreX Library

Dinkumware is an American software company specializing in core libraries for C/, owned and operated by P.J. Plauger. It is based in Concord, Massachusetts.

The company has provided the C++ Standard Library implementation that ships with Microsoft since 1996 and Embarcadero C++Builder since 2005,[7] and supplies and libraries to the embedded community. It also provides libraries for Java and other tools, including "proofers" to test for library adherence to the standard.

Nonfiction works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Plauger. Phillip James. Spectroscopy in the Titanium Isotopes. PhD Thesis. Michigan State University, Department of Physics. 2011-12-27. 1969. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160408110717/https://publications.nscl.msu.edu/thesis/Plauger1969_132.pdf. April 8, 2016. mdy-all.
  2. Book: Salus, Peter H. . Peter H. Salus

    . Peter H. Salus . The Daemon, the Gnu and the Penguin . Chapter 15. Commercial UNIXes to BSDI . . 2005.

  3. Web site: Minutes of WG21 Meeting, October 19, 2009 . Stefanus Du Toit, ISO/IEC C++ Standards Committee Paper N3003 . December 4, 2009 . 2010-04-10 . 10, 20–21.
  4. Web site: Plauger resigned as convener? . comp.std.c++, George Ryan, Ville Voutilainen, Francis Glassborow, and Steve Clamage . October 25, 2009 . 2009-10-27.
  5. [Larry Constantine]
  6. Dr. Dobb's Journal Excellence in Programming Award . Shannon Cochran . March 31, 2004 . Dr. Dobb's Journal.
  7. Web site: Embarcadero's continuing commitment to C, C99 and C++. edn.embarcadero.com. 2019-09-17.