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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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Net productivity drops when hours go to high. Don't assume the best of the best are there merely because they invest more time. If that were the case, anyone could become a great programmer. – Brian Feb 9 at 20:31
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80 Answers

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John McCarthy -- wrote the first version of lisp

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ICBW, but I thought he designed it as a language to run on a chalkboard. One/more of his students surprised him by actually implementing it. – Alister Bulman Apr 10 at 19:37
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Derek Smart of Battlecruiser 3000AD was pretty big in his day. Apparently he was pretty good at flame wars too...

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Nick Bradbury. He wrote HomeSite, TopStyle, and FeedDemon. All three programs top notch. Plus, he pays a lot of attention to his users - that can't be easy for a one-man shop.

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Simon Tatham wrote PuTTY. Arguably, one of the most popular [citation needed] windows SSH clients.

Matt Wright wrote a lot of (in)famous Perl scripts that are still in use.

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This is one of those great programmers who doesn't have the "Knuth" fame - Fabrice Bellard. He wrote the original FFmpeg distribution, is the project leader for QEMU, discovered the fastest current pi algorithm, and has not one, but two, wins in the The International Obfuscated C Code Contest. To use a line from one of my favorite CS professors, the man is a rock star.

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Shawn Fanning, creator of Napster.

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Paul Vixie.

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Matthew Smith, wrote Manic Miner and Jet Set Willy all on his lonesome.

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_why's self-portrait

_why has contributed some cool stuff to the Ruby community :

... and many more :)

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Eugene Roshal for creation of FAR file manager, RAR file format and WinRAR file archiver.

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Bram Moolenaar -- wrote almost all of VIM by himself :]

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Joe Hewitt, creator of Firebug and DOM Inspector.

I love Firebug. It made web page debugging way easier.

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My $0.02: Cleve Moler - original author of MATLAB.

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Has anyone mentioned Gary Kildall (CP/M) or are you guys too young to remember?

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Steve Streeting whom created Ogre3D, the Object-Oriented Graphics Rendering Engine.

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Arthur Whitney, the developer of the "K" programming language.

Where I heard about him: Superstar programmers

Thought experiment:

The requirement is to build from scratch an SQL engine working on in memory data (take > this as a given. Try to estimate the no. of lines of code (programming language/environment of your choice) this is going to take, and the time it will take you to build it.

Try to estimate the same considering someone you consider good, and someone you consider average.

Scroll down when you've written down your estimates.

Did you ?

Well ?

Using the programming language K, [ http://nsl.com/k/t.k ], a 14 line implementation, took Stevan Apter a couple of hours to write; But that's just the backend. You want an SQL interface? Arthur Whitney just published one in [ http://kx.com/q/e/s.k ], taking all of 20 lines (admittedly, denser than Stevan's); 3 for lexing, ~8 for parsing, the rest for evaluating. I don't know how long it took Arthur, but a day would probably be way too long.

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Walter Bright was once a one-man show for several years when it came to Digital Mars' C++ compiler. He also started the D language and wrote a C++ version of Empire by himslef (later ported it to D).

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Shaun Inman I guess he was solo

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Paul Lutus (Apple Writer, among others)

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Wayne Ratliff - dBASE. Best example of foundational PC software, written the hard way (in assembler).

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Markus Frind CEO of Plentyoffish.com

One man show . Created one of largest dating site by himself using asp.net Gross upwards of 30k day .

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Probably not on the scale of RMS or Carmack, but Jonathan Blow made Braid single-handedly. Look at how the audio and particle systems reverse in sync with the gameplay; it's a pretty neat effort.

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Charles Babbage - Originator of the concept of a programmable computer.

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Al Lowe for Leisure Suit Larry series :) Will Wright for SimCity and finally David Braben for Elite

Perhaps Ron Gilbert should also get a mention for bringing the world Monkey Island (tm)

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dark_alex - though branded as hacker, its still falls under this one-man-army category

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Pixel - Cave Story

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

Slava Pestov. Factor creator (Factor is one of the most advanced programming languages out there).

Created Jedit (at 15 years old?)

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Jon Tackabury - Binary Fortress

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Doug Cutting

Started Lucene, started Nutch, created Hadoop after Google publish there paper on Map Reduce...

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Rich Hickey - author of Clojure.

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