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MMIXware: A RISC Computer for the Third Millennium (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
 
 
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MMIXware: A RISC Computer for the Third Millennium (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) [Paperback]

Donald E. Knuth (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Lecture Notes in Computer Science January 14, 2000
MMIX is a RISC computer designed by Don Knuth to illustrate machine-level aspects of programming. In the author's book series "The Art of Computer Programming", MMIX replaces the 1960s-style machine MIX. A particular goal in the design of MMIX was to keep its machine language simple, elegant, and easy to learn. At the same time, all of the complexities needed to achieve high performance in practice are taken into account. This book constitutes a collection of programs written in CWEB that make MMIX a virtual reality. Among other utilities, an assembler converting MMIX symbolic files to MMIX objects and two simulators executing the programs in given object files are provided. The latest version of all programs can be downloaded from MMIX's home page. The book provides a complete documentation of the MMIX computer and its assembly language. It also presents mini-indexes, which make the programs much easier to understand.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 558 pages
  • Publisher: Springer; 1 edition (January 14, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 3540669388
  • ISBN-13: 978-3540669388
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.8 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,268,219 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Donald E. Knuth was born on January 10, 1938 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He studied mathematics as an undergraduate at Case Institute of Technology, where he also wrote software at the Computing Center. The Case faculty took the unprecedented step of awarding him a Master's degree together with the B.S. he received in 1960. After graduate studies at California Institute of Technology, he received a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1963 and then remained on the mathematics faculty. Throughout this period he continued to be involved with software development, serving as consultant to Burroughs Corporation from 1960-1968 and as editor of Programming Languages for ACM publications from 1964-1967.

He joined Stanford University as Professor of Computer Science in 1968, and was appointed to Stanford's first endowed chair in computer science nine years later. As a university professor he introduced a variety of new courses into the curriculum, notably Data Structures and Concrete Mathematics. In 1993 he became Professor Emeritus of The Art of Computer Programming. He has supervised the dissertations of 28 students.

Knuth began in 1962 to prepare textbooks about programming techniques, and this work evolved into a projected seven-volume series entitled The Art of Computer Programming. Volumes 1-3 first appeared in 1968, 1969, and 1973. Having revised these three in 1997, he is now working full time on the remaining volumes. Volume 4A appeared at the beginning of 2011. More than one million copies have already been printed, including translations into ten languages.

He took ten years off from that project to work on digital typography, developing the TeX system for document preparation and the METAFONT system for alphabet design. Noteworthy by-products of those activities were the WEB and CWEB languages for structured documentation, and the accompanying methodology of Literate Programming. TeX is now used to produce most of the world's scientific literature in physics and mathematics.

His research papers have been instrumental in establishing several subareas of computer science and software engineering: LR(k) parsing; attribute grammars; the Knuth-Bendix algorithm for axiomatic reasoning; empirical studies of user programs and profiles; analysis of algorithms. In general, his works have been directed towards the search for a proper balance between theory and practice.

Professor Knuth received the ACM Turing Award in 1974 and became a Fellow of the British Computer Society in 1980, an Honorary Member of the IEEE in 1982. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the National Academy of Engineering; he is also a foreign associate of l'Academie des Sciences (Paris), Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi (Oslo), Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften (Munich), the Royal Society (London), and Rossiiskaya Akademia Nauk (Moscow). He holds five patents and has published approximately 160 papers in addition to his 28 books. He received the Medal of Science from President Carter in 1979, the American Mathematical Society's Steele Prize for expository writing in 1986, the New York Academy of Sciences Award in 1987, the J.D. Warnier Prize for software methodology in 1989, the Adelskøld Medal from the Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1994, the Harvey Prize from the Technion in 1995, and the Kyoto Prize for advanced technology in 1996. He was a charter recipient of the IEEE Computer Pioneer Award in 1982, after having received the IEEE Computer Society's W. Wallace McDowell Award in 1980; he received the IEEE's John von Neumann Medal in 1995. He holds honorary doctorates from Oxford University, the University of Paris, St. Petersburg University, and more than a dozen colleges and universities in America.

Professor Knuth lives on the Stanford campus with his wife, Jill. They have two children, John and Jennifer. Music is his main avocation.

 

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Can I give 2 stars to Knuth?, February 15, 2009
This review is from: MMIXware: A RISC Computer for the Third Millennium (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) (Paperback)
I apologize for giving 2 stars to D. Knuth. Who am I to give such bad rating to him?

As I said, I do not feel comfortable giving 2 stars to D. Knuth. Not at all. However, I think that this is not a book at all but a code listing. Even more, it costs 100 $!
Looking that example of CWEB[...] usage, I do not think I will ever use it.

As an experiment on automatic documentation it is worth taking a look... not to that book but to the CWEB project. However, I do not see the benefit of printing that book. I would rather prefer reading an extension in his Volume 1, Fascicle 1 (Art of Computing Programming).

Let's be fair... At least it is interesting to read Knuth code style. Millions times better better than my own :P

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Thirty-eight years have passed since the MIX computer was designed, and computer architecture has been converging during those years towards a rather different style of machine. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
goto stall, trip handler, special coroutines, resumption registers, cache spec, goto bypass, goto oops, case zro, mmo file, octa aux, simultaneous lookup, symbol table node, goto die, page table calculations, register int, static spec, goto terminate, mmo format, char handle, bool overflow, floating point conventions, integer overflow exception, register bool, special operands, translation caches
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Seminumerical Algorithms, The Art of Computer Programming, Clean the D-cache, Clean the I-cache, Clean the S-cache, Copy Scache-inbuf, Fill Scache-inbuf
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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