Haskell Curry

Haskell Brooks Curry (September 12, 1900 - September 1, 1982) was an American mathematician and logician. Born in Millis, Massachusetts, the son of educator Samuel Silas Curry, he was educated at Harvard University and received a doctorate from Gttingen in 1930, under supervision of David Hilbert. He taught at Harvard, Princeton, and then beginning in 1929 for 35 years at Pennsylvania State University. In 1942 he exposited Curry's paradox. In 1966 he became professor of mathematics at Amsterdam. He died in State College, Pennsylvania. Curry's main work was in mathematical logic, especially in the theory of formal systems and processes - combinatory logic, the foundation for functional programming languages. His works include Combinatory Logic (1958) and Foundations of Mathematical Logic (1963). The functional computer languages Haskell and Curry are named after him, as is the process of currying in functional programming languages.

External links

Curry, Haskell Curry, Haskell Curry, Haskell

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the greatest show on earth
garden
pot
victor hugo
midnight cowboy
dustin hoffman
janez strnad
parashurama
vishnu
krishna
amiga demos
uss tang
the best years of our lives
beaverton, oregon
security (finance)
american river
beam
data transmission
dual numbers
walter mondale
aston villa f.c.
population transfer
entity
eamon de valera
mount everest
glasnevin cemetery
chiron
katowice
department of defense dictionary of military and associated terms
ethnic conflict in india
persikka interactive
vantaa
1948 winter olympics
1948 summer olympics
charles m. schulz
peanuts
norman
vince guaraldi
rollo
western christianity
eastern christianity
great lent
gunrunning
zhores ivanovich alferov