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Programming

Erlang Creator Joe Armstrong Has Died (twitter.com) 60

Rogers Cadenhead (Slashdot reader #4,482) writes: Joe Armstrong, the computer scientist best known as one of the creators of the Erlang programming language, died Saturday. Erlang Solutions founder Francesco Cesarini shared the news on Twitter and said, "His work has laid the foundation which will be used by generations to come. RIP @joeerl, thank you for inspiring us all."

Erlang was created by Armstrong, Robert Virding and Mike Williams at the Ericsson telecom company in 1986 and became open source 12 years later. It is known for functional programming, immutable data, code hot-swapping and systems that require insanely high levels of availability.

In another Tweet, Cesarini asks people to share their own memories of Armstrong -- " funny, enlightening or plain silly." And Ulf Wiger, who describes himself as an Erlang old-timer, remembered giving a talk about how to avoid projects dominated by mediocrity. "I used Joe as an example of a 'brilliant developer, but hard to fit into a regular project.'"

Joe had replied, "I am very EASY to fit into regular projects! It's just that so few projects are regular..."
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Erlang Creator Joe Armstrong Has Died

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    You will be missed!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Joe was truly a man of honor and respect. I will always remember him as being humble and kind, two traits that are missing in so many of today's programming language creators and open source leaders.

      Look at the attitudes that open source "leaders" like Linus, Lennart, DHH and Steve Klabnik exhibit. They are the opposite of how Joe treated his fellow programmers, in my opinion. Joe didn't belittle us. Joe didn't force his software on us against our wills. Joe didn't have a constant smugness. Joe didn't use m

      • by metacosm ( 45796 ) on Saturday April 20, 2019 @07:02PM (#58465114)

        First of all... Sam Aaron the "millennial on the left", which you randomly and pointlessly decided to sling mud at... something I think Joe, who you claim to respect, would never do.

        1. Isn't a millennial (I get fuzzy on the cusp, but he graduated college in 2001)
        2. He was a friend of Joe's (they even did presentations jointly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com])
        3. Created Sonic Pi (which is awesome, can see in the above link)

  • It is known for functional programming, immutable data, code hot-swapping and systems that require insanely high levels of availability.

    Actually, some of us think that computers were invented so that insanely high levels of availability and reliability could become the new normal.

    In the blue trunks: Edsger W. Dijkstra, Ralph Nader, Donald Knuth, Leslie Lamport, Joe Armstrong, Jon Postel, Robin Milner, Daniel J. Bernstein, Theo de Raadt.

    The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one per

  • This blog by Francesco Cessarini is a lovely tribute and provides a wonderful slice of history about the early days of Erlang development

    https://www.erlang-solutions.c... [erlang-solutions.com]

    I would also recommend anyone with a interest in concurrency programming to listen to this talk

    https://www.erlang-solutions.c... [erlang-solutions.com]

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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