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Recently Jeff was talking about Alan Kay on the Stack Overflow podcast, and to be honest, I didn't have a clue who he was. Sorry Mr. Kay if your reading this ;-)

For the most part, the only widely known industry names are known for thier business acumen. Names like; Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Jonathan Schwartz, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin. All of these people have accomplished a lot, but again; they are well known and admired for thier business skills, and may or may not be admired for thier programming skills.

Names that immediately spring to my mind are:

  1. All the names above
  2. Robert X. Cringely - industry writer / Pundit
  3. Joel Spolsky & Jeff Atwood - programmers/bloggers
  4. Scott Guthrie - Key product manager (architect?) at Microsoft
  5. Scott Hanselman - Programmer / blogger / podcaster
  6. Linus Torvalds - Creator of Linux

*Obviously, that's not everybody I know of ... but I do have a job

So who are the people that every programmer should know about?

Comment : Some people seem to be voting down multiple name replies. As this doesn't explicitly ask for one name per reply and isn't a competition for "greatest" just a request for "significant" I don't think we should be doing this.

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closed as exact duplicate by Bombe, SCdF, Mehrdad Afshari, Bill the Lizard Jan 20 at 13:02

31 Answers

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Bjarne Stroustrup - Creator of C++

Alan Turing - Father of computer science.

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I can't believe nobody's mentioned Paul Graham yet. He invented Bayesian filtering and is a longtime lisp advocate.

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Tim Berners Lee - Invented the internet!!!

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Must-know for those living in C++ :

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Gerald "Jerry" Weinberg, prolific author of articles and books including The Psychology of Computer Programming.

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Ivar Jacobson --> For his contribution on UML and Use Cases

The gang of four (Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson and John Vlissides)

--> For their work on design patterns

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Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie - C Programming Language

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Joseph Marie Jacquard

Sir Clive Sinclair

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Don't forget about all the guys who brought you distributed systems algorithms, like Leslie Lamport, Nancy Lynch and Jim Gray and also Edgar "Saint" Codd of RDBMS groundwork fame

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Steve McConnell

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Most of all, oneself. What are your own strong spots and weaknesses, common mistakes, your "personal planning factor" etc.

Other than that, know for what?

Proof by Authority? I don't think that is wrong by default, but valuing an opinion higher just because "it's from someone I am supposed to know" is quite weak.

Conversational material? There's a good list available already - I don't have much to add.

Knowing their work? That strongly depends on the field you are working on. With some general merit, I'd list:
Raymond Chen as an exercise what long term software maintenance means
Steve McConell and/or Fred Brooks for their "applicable truths" in software engineering
Joel for the bridge between code and product

Michael Abrash as my personal honorable mention.

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Scott Meyers - author of the effective trilogy

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Herbert Simon A.I. and complex systems theorist

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I would add Martin Fowler. He might not have always been the originator but his books explain things very well.

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Christopher Alexander - creator of Pattern Languages

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John Carmack, game dev guru.

C.A.R. Hoare of quicksort.

Rudolf Bayer and Ed McCreight for B-tree data structure which facilitates fast searching.

Steve McConnell for coding best practices (Code Complete).

John Von Neumann for today's computer architecture(data and program memory are mapped into the same address space), hence the eventual flexibility of computers. Though a virus becomes a side effect of that architecture.

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Andy Tanenbaum, of Minix, distributed operating systems, and many great textbooks fame.

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Fred Brooks

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Off the top of my head and in no particular order:

Brian Kernighan, Peter Weinberger, Dennis Ritchie, Edsger Dijksta, John Backus, Donald Knuth, Alfred Aho, C.A.R. Hoare, John McCarthy, Guy Steele, Niklaus Wirth, Barbara Liskov, Charles Babbage, Robert Pike, Ward Cunningham, Fred Brooks and probably a lot more I can't think of right now.

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Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace

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If you're into/doing Agile/unit testing at all then:

  1. Kent Beck
  2. Ron Jeffries
  3. J.B. Rainsberger
  4. Michael C. Feathers
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You obviously missed:

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Guy L. Steele. Of Scheme fame. But having worked on many other programming languages.

Edit:

Since there is some disagreement. He was/is on the standard committees for:

  • Scheme
  • ECMAScript
  • X3J11 (the C language)
  • X3J3 (Fortran)
  • X3J13 (Common Lisp)

Has published/coauthored:

  • C: A Reference Manual
  • Common Lisp the Language
  • The High Performance Fortran Handbook
  • The Java Language Specification
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Anders Hejlsberg - Programming language creator (Turbo Pascal / Delphi, J++, C#)

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Alan Turing and Kurt Godel

I highly recommend reading Andrew Hodges biography of Alan Turing as his life was historic, intriguing, mind-blowing, and ultimately, tragic.

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For programmers, I'd say:

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