Luca Cardelli
Luca Cardelli | |
---|---|
Born | Luca Andrea Cardelli |
Education | University of Pisa[1] PhD, University of Edinburgh, 1982 |
Known for | Theory of Objects[2] with Martín Abadi |
Awards | Fellow of the Royal Society (2005) Dahl–Nygaard Prize (2007) Fellow of the ACM (2005) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Type theory Operational semantics |
Institutions | Bell Labs Microsoft Research Digital Equipment Corporation University of Edinburgh University of Oxford[3] |
Thesis | An algebraic approach to hardware description and verification (1982) |
Doctoral advisor | Gordon Plotkin[4] |
Website | lucacardelli |
Luca Andrea Cardelli, Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS), is an Italian computer scientist who is a Research Professor at the University of Oxford in Oxford, UK.[1][5] Cardelli is well known for his research in type theory and operational semantics.[6][7] Among other contributions, in programming languages, he helped design the language Modula-3, implemented the first compiler for the (non-pure) functional language ML, defined the concept of typeful programming, and helped develop the experimental language Polyphonic C#.[2][8][9][10][11][12]
Education[]
He was born in Montecatini Terme, Italy. He attended the University of Pisa[1] before receiving his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) from the University of Edinburgh in 1982.[13] Before joining the University of Oxford in 2014, and Microsoft Research in Cambridge, UK in 1997, he worked for Bell Labs and Digital Equipment Corporation,[1] and contributed to Unix software including vismon.[14]
Awards[]
In 2004 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 2007, Cardelli was awarded the Senior AITO Dahl–Nygaard Prize named for Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard.[15]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Cardelli, Luca". Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press.(subscription required)
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cardelli, Luca; Abadi, Martín (1996). A theory of objects. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-94775-4.
- ^ Cardelli, Luca (2021). "Luca Cardelli". Department of Computer Science. University of Oxford.
- ^ Luca Cardelli at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ Dalchau, N.; Phillips, A.; Goldstein, L. D.; Howarth, M.; Cardelli, L.; Emmott, S.; Elliott, T.; Werner, J. M. (2011). Chakraborty, Arup K (ed.). "A Peptide Filtering Relation Quantifies MHC Class I Peptide Optimization". PLOS Computational Biology. 7 (10): e1002144. Bibcode:2011PLSCB...7E2144D. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002144. PMC 3195949. PMID 22022238.
- ^ Cardelli, L. (1996). "Bad engineering properties of object-orient languages". ACM Computing Surveys. 28 (4es): 150–es. doi:10.1145/242224.242415. S2CID 12105785.
- ^ Cardelli, Luca; Wegner, Peter (December 1985). "On understanding types, data abstraction, and polymorphism" (PDF). ACM Computing Surveys. 17 (4): 471–523. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.117.695. doi:10.1145/6041.6042. ISSN 0360-0300. S2CID 2921816.
- ^ Luca Cardelli author profile page at the ACM Digital Library
- ^ Luca Cardelli at DBLP Bibliography Server
- ^ List of publications from Microsoft Academic
- ^ Luca Cardelli's publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database. (subscription required)
- ^ Abadi, M.; Cardelli, L.; Curien, P. L.; Levy, J. J. (1990). "Explicit substitutions". Proceedings of the 17th ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT symposium on Principles of programming languages (POPL) '90. p. 31–46. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.22.9903. doi:10.1145/96709.96712. ISBN 978-0897913430. S2CID 7265577.
- ^ Cardelli, Luca (1982). An algebraic approach to hardware description and verification (PhD thesis). University of Edinburgh.
- ^ McIlroy, M. D. (1987). A Research Unix reader: annotated excerpts from the Programmer's Manual, 1971–1986 (PDF) (Technical report). CSTR. Bell Labs. 139.
- ^ "The AITO Dahl–Nygaard Prize Winners for 2007". Association Internationale pour les Technologies Objets. Mjølner Informatics. 2007.
External links[]
- Computer scientist stubs
- Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
- Italian computer scientists
- Living people
- Fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Programming language researchers
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- DNA nanotechnology people