"You Are Not Expected to Understand This"

How 26 Lines of Code Changed the World

Paperback, 208 pages

Published Nov. 15, 2022 by Princeton University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-691-20848-0
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4 stars (2 reviews)

1 edition

A good collection of essays on coding.

4 stars

A fascinating book about the various way computers and coding have changed the world. Some essays are on the history of coding and others are on famous code hacks. Some essays touch on ethics, social justice, discrimination and cheats that coding has enabled. And, of course, one essay is one that infamous comment found in the Commentary on UNIX: "You are not expected to understand this."

What follows is a summary of each essay in the book.

  1. The First Line of Code: a look at what may be the first lines of code written in history to control weaving looms using punch cards.

  2. Monte Carlo Algorithms: Random Numbers in Computing from the H-Bomb to Today: on the history of Monte Carlo Algorithms, whose statistics and random numbers are used in many fields to estimate the future behaviours of systems in many fields.

  3. Jean Sammet and the Code That Runs the …