John Fitch (computer scientist)

Computer scientist, mathematician and composer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Peter Fitch (also known as John ffitch) is a computer scientist, mathematician and composer, who has worked on relativity, planetary astronomy, computer algebra and Lisp.[4] Alongside Victor Lazzarini and Steven Yi, he is the project leader for audio programming language Csound,[5] having a leading role in its development since the early 1990s; and he was a director of Codemist Ltd,[1] which developed the Norcroft C compiler.[6][7][8][9][10]

Quick Facts Born, Other names ...
John Fitch
Born
John Peter Fitch

1945 (age 7980)[1]
Other namesJohn ffitch
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
AwardsAdams Prize (1975)
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Bath
University of Leeds
Maynooth University
ThesisAn algebraic manipulator (1971)
Doctoral advisorDavid Barton[2]
Doctoral studentsTom Crick[3]
James Davenport[2]
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Education and early life

Born in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England in December 1945,[1] Fitch was educated at St John's College, Cambridge where he gained a PhD from the University of Cambridge in 1971 supervised by David Barton.[2][11][12]

Career and research

Fitch spent six years at Cambridge as a postdoctoral researcher - winning the Adams Prize for Mathematics in 1975 for a joint essay with David Barton on Applications of algebraic manipulative systems to physics.[citation needed]

Fitch was a visiting professor the University of Utah for a year, then lectured at the University of Leeds for 18 months, before becoming professor and then chair of software engineering at the University of Bath,[12] which his biography claims is "a subject about which he knows little"; his 31-year career there lasted April 1980 – September 2011,[12] after which he was named an adjunct professor of music at Maynooth University.[13][14]

Fitch lectured for the module CM20029: The Essence of Compilers, as well as optional modules involving computer music and digital signal processing. According to his biography, "despite his long hair and beard,[15] and the uncertain spelling of his name, [he] was never a hippie".[16][17]

His former doctoral students include James Davenport[2] and Tom Crick.[3]

Personal life

Fitch is married to historian Audrey Fitch.[citation needed]

References

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