Dennis Ritchie Quotes (24 Quotes)


    At the same time, much of it seems to have to do with recreating things we or others had already done; it seems rather derivative intellectually; is there a dearth of really new ideas?

    True enough that standards bodies themselves have weak teeth, but they do have influence and importance when a language begins to be widely used.

    We really didn't buy it thinking we'd have this enormous investment,

    UNIX is basically a simple operating system, but you have to be a genius to understand the simplicity.

    For infrastructure technology, C will be hard to displace.


    C is peculiar in a lot of ways, but it, like many other successful things, has a certain unity of approach that stems from development in a small group.

    I'm just an observer of Java, and where Microsoft wants to go with C# is too early to tell.

    I've done a reasonable amount of travelling, which I enjoyed, but not for too long at a time.

    I'm not picking a winner here, but higher-level ways of instructing machines will continue to occupy more of the center of the stage.

    I can't recall any difficulty in making the C language definition completely open - any discussion on the matter tended to mention languages whose inventors tried to keep tight control, and consequent ill fate.

    Over the past several years, I've been more in a managerial role.

    The visible things that have come from the group have been the Plan 9 system and Inferno, but I hasten to say that the ideas and the work have come from colleagues.

    At least for the people who send me mail about a new language that they're designing, the general advice is: do it to learn about how to write a compiler.

    C++ and Java, say, are presumably growing faster than plain C, but I bet C will still be around.

    Any editing, software work, and mail is done in this exported Plan 9.

    I'm not a person who particularly had heros when growing up.

    When I read commentary about suggestions for where C should go, I often think back and give thanks that it wasn't developed under the advice of a worldwide crowd.

    I fix things now and then, more often tweak HTML and make scripts to do things.

    The kind of programming that C provides will probably remain similar absolutely or slowly decline in usage, but relatively, JavaScript or its variants, or XML, will continue to become more central.

    As a general phenomenon, I think they're great, but they suffer from much the same struggles and competition that the proprietary ones did and do.

    A new release of Plan 9 happened in June, and at about the same time a new release of the Inferno system, which began here, was announced by Vita Nuova.

    Likewise, C managed to escape its original close ties with Unix as a useful tool for writing applications in different environments.

    Obviously, the person who had most influence on my career was Ken Thompson.

    C was already implemented on several quite different machines and OSs, Unix was already being distributed on the PDP-11, but the portability of the whole system was new.


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