The annotated Turing : a guided tour through Alan Turing's historic paper on computability and the Turing machine / Charles Petzold.
Material type: TextPublisher: Indianapolis, IN : Wiley Publishing, 2008Description: xii, 372 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780470229057
- 511.352 PE.A 2008 23
- QA267 .P48 2008
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Books | The Knowledge Hub Library | Computing | 511.352 PE.A 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 210880 | ||
Books | The Knowledge Hub Library | Computing | 511.352 PE.A 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 210543 | ||
Books | The Knowledge Hub Library | Computing | 511.352 PE.A 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 210544 | ||
Books | The Knowledge Hub Library | Computing | 511.352 PE.A 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 210545 |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 361-365) and index.
This tomb holds Diophantus -- The irrational and the transcendental -- Centuries of progress -- The education of Alan Turing -- Machines at work -- Addition and multiplication -- Also known as subroutines -- Everything is a number -- The universal machine -- Computers and computability -- Of machines and men -- Logic and computability -- Computable functions -- The major proof -- The lambda calculus -- Conceiving the continuum -- Is everything a turing machine? -- The long sleep of Diophantus.
Mathematician Alan Turing invented an imaginary computer known as the Turing Machine; in an age before computers, he explored the concept of what it meant to be computable, creating the field of computability theory in the process, a foundation of present-day computer programming. The book expands Turing's original 36-page paper with additional background chapters and extensive annotations; the author elaborates on and clarifies many of Turing's statements, making the original difficult-to-read document accessible to present day programmers, computer science majors, math geeks, and others. Interwoven into the narrative are the highlights of Turing's own life: his years at Cambridge and Princeton, his secret work in cryptanalysis during World War II, his involvement in seminal computer projects, his speculations about artificial intelligence, his arrest and prosecution for the crime of "gross indecency," and his early death by apparent suicide at the age of 41
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