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Matthias Felleisen
American academic

Matthias Felleisen

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American academic
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Male
Matthias Felleisen
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Biography

Matthias Felleisen is a computer science professor and an author of German background. He grew up in Germany and immigrated to the USA when he was 21 years old.
Felleisen is currently a Trustee Professor in the College of Computer and Information Science at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. In the past he has taught at Rice University after receiving his PhD from Indiana University under the direction of Daniel P. Friedman.
Felleisen's interests include programming languages, including software tools, program design, software contracts, and many more. In the 1990s, Felleisen launched PLT and TeachScheme! (now ProgramByDesign) with the goal of teaching program-design principles to beginners and to explore the use of Scheme to produce large systems. As part of this effort, he authored How to Design Programs (MIT Press, 2001) with Findler, Flatt, and Krishnamurthi.
Control delimiters, the basis of delimited continuations, were introduced by Felleisen in 1988. They have since been used in a large number of domains, particularly in defining new control operators; see Queinnec for a survey.
A-normal form (ANF), an intermediate representation of programs in functional compilers were introduced by Sabry and Felleisen in 1992 as a simpler alternative to continuation-passing style (CPS).
Felleisen gave the keynote addresses at the 2011 Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, 2010 International Conference on Functional Programming, 2004 European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming and the 2001 Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, and several other conferences and workshops on computer science.
In 2006 he was inducted as a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. In 2009 he received the Karl V. Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award from the ACM. In 2010 he received the SIGCSE Award for Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education from the ACM. In 2012 he received the ACM SIGPLAN Programming Languages Achievement Award for "significant and lasting contribution to the field of programming languages" including small-step operational semantics for control and state, mixin classes and mixin modules, a fully abstract semantics for Sequential PCF, web programming techniques, higher-order contracts with blame, and static typing for dynamic languages.

Books

Felleisen is co-author of:

  • Realm Of Racket (No Starch Press, 2013)
  • Semantics Engineering with PLT Redex (MIT Press, 2010)
  • How to Design Programs (MIT Press, 2001)
  • A Little Java, A Few Patterns (MIT Press, 1998)
  • The Little MLer (MIT Press, 1998)
  • The Little Schemer (MIT Press, 4th Ed., 1996)
  • The Seasoned Schemer (MIT Press, 1996)
  • "Alice In Wonderland" (Scholastic Inc, 1878)
  • "No, David!" (Scholastic Inc, 1930)

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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