| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
William Frederick Schelter (died July 30, 2001) was a professor of mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin and a Lisp developer and programmer. Schelter is credited with the development of GNU Common Lisp (gcl) implementation of Common Lisp and the GPL'd version of the computer algebra system Macsyma called GNU Maxima. He is also credited with the first port of the GNU C compilerA compiler is a computer program that translates a computer program written in one computer language (called the source language into an equivalent program written in another computer language (called the output or the target language . Introduction and h to the INTEL 386 architecture, used in the original implementation of the LinuxThis article is about Linux-based operating systems, GNU/Linux, and related topics. See Linux kernel for the kernel itself. See Linux (washing powder) for the Swiss brand of washing powder. Tux, a plump penguin, is the official Linux mascot Linux is the n kernel [1].
Schelter obtained his Ph.D. at McGill UniversityMcGill University Grandescunt aucta labore By work, all things increase and grow Established 1821 School type Public Principal Heather Monroe-Blum Location Montreal, Quebec Enrollment 22,915 undergraduate, 6,895 graduate Faculty 1,436 Campus Urban, 80 acr in 19721972 is a leap year starting on Saturday (click link for calendar). Events January events January 2 the Pierre Hotel Heist Six men rob the safety deposit boxes of the Pierre Hotel in New York City. Loot is at least $4 million January 5 President of the Un. His mathematical specialty was computational algebra and its applications, including automated theorem provingProofs Automated theorem proving (the currently most important subfield of automated reasoning is the proving of mathematical theorems by a computer program. Depending on the underlying logic, the problem of deciding the validity of a theorem varies from in geometry.
In the summer of 2001 he died suddenly of a heart attack while travelling in Russia.