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<TITLE>Computer Science Logo Style vol 3:Acknowledgments</TITLE>
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<CITE>Computer Science Logo Style</CITE> volume 3:
<CITE>Beyond Programming</CITE> 2/e Copyright (C) 1997 MIT
<H1>Acknowledgments</H1>

<TABLE width="100%"><TR><TD>
<IMG SRC="../csls3.jpg" ALT="cover photo">
<TD><TABLE>
<TR><TD align="right"><CITE><A HREF="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~bh/">Brian
Harvey</A><BR>University of California, Berkeley</CITE>
<TR><TD align="right"><BR>
<TR><TD align="right"><A HREF="../pdf/v3ch00.pdf">Download PDF version</A>
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<TR><TD align="right"><A HREF="https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/computer-science-logo-style-second-edition-volume-3">MIT
Press web page for <CITE>Computer Science Logo Style</CITE></A>
</TABLE></TABLE>

<HR>

<P>
As for the previous two volumes, my greatest debts are to Hal Abelson and
Paul Goldenberg.  Both of them read the manuscript carefully through several
drafts.  Hal is great at noticing the large problems; he makes comments like
&quot;throw out this whole chapter&quot; and &quot;you are putting the cart before the
horse here.&quot;  Paul's comments were generally on a more detailed level,
pointing out sections in which potentially valuable content was sabotaged by
a presentation that nobody would understand.  Together they have improved
the book enormously.

<P>Some of the examples in this book are ones that were posed to me by other
people in other contexts.  Horacio Reggini raised the issue of listing (not
merely counting) the combinations of <EM>r</EM> elements of a list;
Dick White
asked me to investigate just how secure the Simplex lock is;
Chris Anderson
taught the probability class where the question about multinomial expansions
arose.  I'm grateful to Anita Harnadek, whom I've never met, for
a logic
problem I use to demonstrate inference systems.  (She is, by the way, the
author of a fantastic textbook called <EM>Critical Thinking</EM> that I
recommend to teachers of almost any subject: math, English, or social
studies.)  Jim Davis's Logo interpreter in Logo (in the <EM>LogoWorks</EM>
anthology I co-edited) was an inspiration for the Pascal compiler.

<P>
I'm grateful to Dan Bobrow, Sherry Turkle, and
Terry Winograd for permission
to quote from their work here.  In particular, Bobrow's doctoral thesis
forms the basis for my chapter on artificial intelligence, and I'm grateful
for the program design as well as my extensive quotations from the thesis
itself.  He was also very patient in answering technical questions about
details of a program he wrote over 20 years ago.

<P>
Mike Clancy taught me about generating functions and used them to find the
closed form definition for the multinomial problem; Michael Somos,
via the <CODE>sci.math</CODE> newsgroup, provided the closed form solution to
the Simplex lock problem.  Paul Hilfinger straightened me out
about parser complexity.

<P>

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<ADDRESS>
<A HREF="../index.html">Brian Harvey</A>, 
<CODE>bh@cs.berkeley.edu</CODE>
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