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Lately I have been learning of more and more programmers who think that if they were working alone, they would be faster and would deliver more quality. Usually that feeling is attached to a feeling that they do the best programming in their team and at the end of the day the idea is quite plausible. If they ARE doing the best programming, and worked alone (and more maybe) the final result would be a better piece of software.

I know this idea would only work if you where enough passionate to work 24/7, on a deadline, and great discipline.

So after considering the idea and trying to learn a little more, I wonder if there are famous one-man-army programmers that have delivered any (useful) software in the past?

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John Carmack

The guy that wrote the engine for the Doom games, Wolfenstein, the Quake games, etc. Read Masters of Doom, it is a great history of what he and John Romero have done.

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Just don't ask about Daikatana :) – tsilb Feb 9 at 23:12
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Daikatana was done by Romero after he left iD, don't think there was much Carmack involved ;-) – Jasper Bekkers Feb 9 at 23:17
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I used to read J. Carmack's blog/finger posts in the early 90's and what few papers he wrote... He is and still one of the Einsteins of video game engines and he's literally a rocket scientist :) – David Feb 10 at 5:44
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I would agree, think John Carmack will voted for one of the best programmers out there. – Berlin Brown Feb 10 at 7:20
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Carmack's games are as games rather dull but his programming is somewhere near insanely impressive and godlike so his name has to be upvoted. – Esko Feb 10 at 7:41
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Donald Knuth

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Indeed. He wrote every line of code of TeX himself, and I believe the same is true of Metafont as well. [He often have discussions with other people about important decisions, but all the code was written alone.] – ShreevatsaR Feb 10 at 4:50
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Steve Wozniak pretty much was apple's programming staff for the first bit.

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He designed their early hardware too. – Bill the Lizard Feb 9 at 20:55
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Richard M. Stallman (RMS). While known recently for political rants about closed source software, in his day he was quite the programmer. He single handedly kept up with commercial lisp machine code for quite some time. Emacs and gcc are some of the things he created.

There's a great description of him in the book in Hackers by Steven Levy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stallman

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Linus Torvalds

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Well, Linus is the army. Whatever he starts, the huge army appears out of nowhere and produces something huge. So, no Linus, no army :) – Dev er dev Feb 10 at 15:41
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Linus's success is based on not being a one-man-army. The GPL was a very important decision of his. – ashawley Mar 24 at 19:24
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xkcd.com/225 – Jason Jun 19 at 8:34
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Chris Sawyer. He had a little help with music and graphics, but otherwise RollerCoaster Tycoon was all him. Amazing, especially given the physics engine. Last but not least, the entire game was written in assembly language.

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Don't forget Transport Tycoon, which probably has a bigger cult following than RCT. – Erik Feb 9 at 20:38
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Bill Joy - wrote vi as well as csh, rlogin, rsh, and rcp

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Someone buy that man a dictionary! – Mike Robinson Feb 9 at 20:54
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Guido van Rossum (author of Python)

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Just for completeness (not really competitive with today's programming "heros", but truly a "one-man-army" in her times ;-): Ada Lovelace

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Larry Wall - Perl.

And for a fun trip to see what goes in that fabulous mind of his , C programmers can read the winning entry in the international C obfuscation contest in 1986. It's filed under wall.c

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Bjarne Stroustrup for the invention and 1st implementation of C++

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Anders Hejlsberg creator of Turbo Pascal, Delphi, C# (and partly .NET), ....

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Yukihiro Matsumoto did deliver a lot of Ruby all by himself. Ruby's popular now, and lots of people have contributed to it, but he did single-handedly start the ball rolling.

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Oren Eini aka Ayende Rahien, author of Rhino Mocks and other great open source tools. His is some of the best and most elegant code around.

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Bram Cohen, at least his little project is now causing 50% of all internet traffic[citation needed].

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you can use it for anything that needs to be transported to people. – Svish Feb 10 at 8:34
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Yes, BitTorrent is used for example by Blizzard to distribute their World of Warcraft Patches or digital downloads from their online store. Also, Linux distributions use it for their DVDs. I will use it for my stuff because 4 GB Webspace is $$$. – Michael Stum Feb 10 at 11:49
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@svish - I'd like a chocolate bar please, can you seed? – AShelly Feb 10 at 20:10
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John Resig, creator of the jQuery javacript framework.

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Jamie Zawinski (links to one of the most epic stories in the history of computer science)

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DJ Bernstein. qmail, djbdns, and many many others.

Oh, and suing the United States so people here can freely publish cryptography tools on the Internet. Not exactly programming, but totally one-man-army.

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Jon Skeet

So that can't be correct he is a micro celebrity.

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When does Jon Skeet have time for programming? – jrockway Feb 9 at 20:48
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He has an NMI fire every 8ns during which he stops answering prayers and writes several bug-free programs. – Ken Feb 9 at 20:58
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@jrockway: Jon uses Butterflies: stackoverflow.com/questions/305223/… – Oscar Reyes Feb 21 at 1:45
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Steve Gibson

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Phil Katz absolutely deserves mention. Where would we have been without PKZip.

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This isn't just a feeling, this is the an article in the 20th anniversary edition of a book by Frederick Brooks called The Mythical Man Month. This is actually, I would guess, a very frequent situation. The personality of a software developer leads itself to being somewhat independent anyways. I don't know of prime examples, but you may be interested in the book I linked above.

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John Backus - Fortran

Stephen Wolfram - Mathematica package

Sid Meier - Civilization

Tim Berners-Lee - inventor of World Wide Web

Phil Zimmermann - PGP

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Chuck Moore - Created Forth, ported it to dozens of architectures, designed several microprocessors, made his own CAD system, earned millions on hardware patents, created colorForth... and so on.

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Khaled Mardam-Bey, author of mIRC, the famous IRC client.

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In the gaming world:

  • Jon Van Caneghem - Known for the Might and Magic series, he single-handedly wrote, designed and developed the first entry in the series, with just a little help for artwork.
  • Dan Bunten - Created M.U.L.E., Seven Cities of Gold and a variety of other games, again, back in the early days when game designers were one-man (and, come 1992 for her, one-woman) armies.
  • Bill Budge - Created Pinball Construction Set, alongside many other games. From scratch. Himself. A great Gamasutra piece on PCS's legacy was published recently.

Not to mention all the Atari alumni who went on to Activision. Remember: In the early days, these were all one-man jobs.

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Read this article for example, starting twowards the middle at about the place where it says,

... the privately held company Celera appeared on the verge of beating the combined scientific teams of the rest of the world to the goal of sequencing the human genome. Celera's approach was less rigorous but faster than the Human Genome Project's approach, and for a very understandable reason: Celera's goal was not to advance science but to win the race by any means fair or foul and thereby claim what would have been the most astonishing conquistadorial prize in human history. For had Celera won the race to sequence the genome, and had it filed patents aggressively, it is conceivable that one tiny company could have laid claim to royalties on virtually all medical progress thenceforward. Nay, they could have claimed proprietary interest in the evolutionary future of the human race.

Never mind that the proposition was more ludicrous, on the face of it, than a private company's laying claim to the moon. The threat was real, and scientists were scared.

This state of affairs was remedied by the heroic efforts of a once obscure University of California at Santa Cruz biology graduate student named Jim Kent, who, over the course of 40 days of coding so furiously that he literally had to soak his wrists in ice baths every night, wrote a program to assemble and make public the Human Genome Project's own map. He completed the task one day ahead of Celera.

Kent's stealth attack thereby beat Celera at its own game virtually single-handedly, in a feat that deserves to become as iconic as Watson and Crick's.

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Sid Meier

Co-founded Microprose and wrote Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, and Sid Meier's Colonization,[2][3], Sid Meier's Civilization IV and a bunch more

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There are so many great answers here, but I'll add in my own suggestions, and these come from the 1980's heydays of computer games on the Commodore 64:

Andrew Braybrook (Paradroid, Morpheus, Gribbly's Day Out)

Archer MacLean (Jimmy White's Snooker, Dropzone)

Stavros Fasoulas (Sanxion, Delta)

Martin Walker (Citadel)

Jon Hare/Chris Yates (aka Sensible Software) (Wizball, Sensible Soccer)

Ok, that last one is more of a "two-man" army, however, many of these guys worked (mostly) alone, coded mostly in assembler (6510) and also did sound, music and graphics all by themselves.

(Useless trivia - My gravatar is Gribbly Grobbly from Gribbly's day out!)

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Richard Greenblatt, wrote much stuff at MIT AI Lab, including chess program, Lisp Machine, etc. etc.

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