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David Hough  
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 More options Aug 18 1988, 11:50 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.lang.fortran
From: dgh%...@Sun.COM (David Hough)
Date: 19 Aug 88 03:50:25 GMT
Local: Thurs, Aug 18 1988 11:50 pm
Subject: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C
The third public review of X3J11's Draft ANSI Standard C
is nearing its close on 1 September 1988.  This third review
is based upon a draft dated 13 May 1988 which is not greatly
changed from earlier drafts except that the controversial
"noalias" keyword was removed.

Consequently the Draft still leaves a good deal to be
desired from the numerical point of view.

I have two documents available for electronic
distribution.  
I will be glad to send you
tbl/troff -ms source for these;
I'll send both unless you specify that you only want the newer one
described below.  Unfortunately the
Draft ANSI Standard itself is not publicly available in
electronic form.

The first available document is my 29 March 1988 commentary prepared
for the second public review period (30 pages), with X3J11's
formal responses of 22 April interspersed.  The following were
co-conspirators:

Greg Astfalk     Larry Breed     D. Burton  
W. J. Cody       Iain Johnstone  W. Kahan      
Zhishun Alex Liu David Mendel    Jim Meyering    
K-C Ng           Gene Spafford   Philippe Toint  
Stein Wallace  

The second available document is a draft,
subject to revision until submitted about 25 August, of my commentary
for the third public review.  It's only about 10 pages
since I generally avoided directly repeating what was in
the earlier document.  I'm looking for additional reviewers
and conspirators on this one.   The abstract follows:

          The proposed  C  standard  suffers  numerical
     shortcomings  - many inherited from its precursors
     - in areas of interest to  providers  of  portable
     mathematical  software.   I comment in detail upon
     the following aspects of the proposed standard:

Comment #1, Section 3.9:        encourage sound practices
Comment #2, Section 3.9:        disparage hazardous practices
Comment #3, Section 1.1:        emphasize surprises in rationale
Comment #4, Section 1.1:        anticipate supplemental standards
Comment #5, Section 2.2.4.2:    use "significand"
Comment #6, Section 2.2.4.2:    <float.h> has too many names, not enough information
Comment #7, Section 3.2.1.4:    round conversions between floating types
Comment #8, Section 3.5.4.2:    fix arrays
Comment #9, Section 4.5:        exceptions in mathematical functions
Comment #10, Section 4.5:       tell more in the rationale
Comment #11, Section 4.5:       standardize hypot
Comment #12, Section 4.5.4.6:   delete modf
Comment #13, Section 4.7:       specify which signals can arise

David Hough

dho...@sun.com  
na.ho...@na-net.stanford.edu
{ucbvax,decvax,decwrl,seismo}!sun!dhough


 
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Doug Gwyn  
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 More options Aug 19 1988, 10:43 am
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: g...@smoke.ARPA (Doug Gwyn )
Date: 19 Aug 88 14:43:23 GMT
Local: Fri, Aug 19 1988 10:43 am
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C

In article <64...@sun.uucp> dgh%...@Sun.COM (David Hough) writes:
>I comment in detail upon the following aspects of the proposed standard...

One very important thing to be aware of is that X3J11 intends to get
the proposed standard wrapped up (formally adopted) as soon as possible.
When the third-round comments are reviewed at the September meeting, it
is highly likely that all suggestions for substantive changes to the
proposed standard will be rejected unless they remedy a proven serious
deficiency.  The reason is that any non-editorial change would necessitate
yet another public review, therefore delay in publishing the official
standard.  This process could go on forever, but there is a strong desire
to adopt a "good enough" standard in a timely fashion rather than working
toward a "perfect" standard that is too late to matter.  Many of us feel
that the current draft is "good enough", perhaps modulo editorial nits.

I don't mean to discourage comments on the draft; however, you should be
advised that you'll need some extremely strong arguments for making any
substantive changes.  Examples showing that the current draft is badly
broken would help.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Joseph Reger
Joseph Reger  
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 More options Aug 19 1988, 4:42 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger)
Date: 19 Aug 88 20:42:19 GMT
Local: Fri, Aug 19 1988 4:42 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
In article <8...@smoke.ARPA> g...@brl.arpa (Doug Gwyn (VLD/VMB) <gwyn>) writes:

>I don't mean to discourage comments on the draft; however, you should be
>advised that you'll need some extremely strong arguments for making any
>substantive changes.  Examples showing that the current draft is badly
>broken would help.

The draft may not be 'badly broken' but is missing out on the opportunity
to make C a convenient language for numerical computing as well.  It is a
pity that many of the 'real programmers' feel that any change that would
allow C to be the language of choice for 'non-real programmers'
(scientists) somehow would hurt their feeling/interests. I did not
participate in the debates about the power operator, noalias, conformant
arrays etc., because I was scared by some the vehemence of the 'defender
of the faith'.  It is sad that never seemed to be enough time to discuss
some recommendations in detail. There are many scientist that I know
(mostly younger people) who really came to like C, and we are using it
despite its problems and deficiencies as far as numerical computing is
concerned.

I strongly feel that it is an unacceptable situation that many of us has
to program around these problems, although some of them could be easily
fixed. Much of today's (computational) science is done in a workstation
environment, mostly under Unix. In the future this is going to be even
more so, especially now that the supercomputer manufacturers are adopting
Unix, too. The best compilers in these environments are the C compilers,
period. Since the manufacturer often uses the same compilers for his own
development, the user can be fairly confident that most of the bugs have
already been eliminated. So there will be ever more scientist who program
in C. Why is it such a good idea to have a growing amount of code around
that contains ugly, difficult to understand "fixes"?

The power operator is a small issue, I agree. Noalias (no flames please, I
am afraid of you) is definitely going to come, since the vector machines
need it. Only that it will come in many (vendor specific) colors and
flavors. Conformant arrays?  We (scientists) need them very much and I do
not see how they would mean any grand problem for C --and the end of the
western civilization-- in the simple version proposed by David Hough (see
his "Comments on Proposed ANSI C Standard").

All these problems could be solved, of course, by the inclusion of the
following statement into the Draft:

"Scientist and other non-real programmers are not allowed to use the
programming language C".

(The funny thing is that some scientist would actually like to see this
statement, not only in the Draft, but everywhere).

Joseph D. Reger,        jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C" by Jim Giles
Jim Giles  
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 More options Aug 19 1988, 8:19 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.lang.fortran
From: j...@beta.lanl.gov (Jim Giles)
Date: 20 Aug 88 00:19:13 GMT
Local: Fri, Aug 19 1988 8:19 pm
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C
Why was this announcement posted to comp.lang.fortran?

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Doug Gwyn
Doug Gwyn  
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 More options Aug 20 1988, 4:09 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: g...@smoke.ARPA (Doug Gwyn )
Date: 20 Aug 88 20:09:32 GMT
Local: Sat, Aug 20 1988 4:09 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <4...@saturn.ucsc.edu> jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger) writes:
>The draft may not be 'badly broken' but is missing out on the opportunity
>to make C a convenient language for numerical computing as well.

I happen to use C for numerical programming, despite occasional flaws
such as those you mention, primarily because it offers much better
support for data structures than do other alternatives such as FORTRAN.
I agree that there are some changes that could make C more convenient
for such applications.  Hough's suggestions are for the most part good
ones, but they haven't been receiving sufficient committee support.

The fundamental problem is that IT IS MUCH TOO LATE to be making
significant changes to the proposed standard.  Look at all the trouble
the last-minute addition of "noalias" caused.  The public review
period is intended as a REVIEW of work done by the committee, not as
an opportunity for language design.  Where were all these scientific
users of C when the design work was being done?  By leaving that up
to people who didn't think the flaws you perceive were significant,
you did not get those flaws addressed in the proposed C standard.
It's easy to complain about other people's work; much easier than
helping with the work.  I suggest that you GET INVOLVED in drafting
the NEXT (revised) standard.

Obviously I am not speaking for X3J11 officially here..


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C" by Jim Valerio
Jim Valerio  
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 More options Aug 21 1988, 9:08 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: jimv@radix (Jim Valerio)
Date: 22 Aug 88 01:08:32 GMT
Local: Sun, Aug 21 1988 9:08 pm
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C
In article <8...@smoke.ARPA> g...@brl.arpa (Doug Gwyn (VLD/VMB) <gwyn>)
responds to David Hough's article (announcing his pending comments to X3J11).
Doug explains that X3J11's intention to get the proposed standard wrapped up
ASAP, and suggests that anything other than editorial changes are very likely
to be rejected.

Based on the replies I saw to the previous review cycle, I'm concerned that
even editorial comments are too likely to be rejected.  Consider the
the Committee's choice not to replace "mantissa" and "value part" with
"significand".  This editing change would bring the standard in conformance
with both IEEE 754/854 and ANSI/IEEE Std 1084-1986 (the IEEE Standard
Glossary of Mathematics of Computing Terminology).

I am also concerned that substantial mistakes are being made in the area of
floating-point support, despite the good critique provided by David Hough
in the previous review cycle.

I found the responses to David Hough's comments in the last review cycle were
often depressingly mechanical, unbalanced, and to my mind, unreasoned.  I
don't understand how <float.h>, demonstably inadequate, arguably wrong, and
lacking prior art, can be accepted.  Compare this to the decision not to
standardize hypot(), a function which exists on both BSD and SysV systems,
a function the Committee called an "invention of limited utility".  Oddly
enough, the complementary atan2() function is standardized; the Committee
explains atan2() "can be used for purposes other than conversion to polar
coordinates", an argument that actually seems to apply more correctly to
hypot().  I could go on, but Hough's letter and the Committee's responses
say it all much better.

I hope that Doug, and the Committee as a whole, will very carefully read
and consider David Hough's comments in this coming review, and perhaps
supply better considered and self-consistent responses than those that
were provided in the previous review cycle.
--
Jim Valerio     jimv%ra...@omepd.intel.com, {verdix,omepd}!radix!jimv


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Joseph Reger
Joseph Reger  
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 More options Aug 22 1988, 5:20 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger)
Date: 22 Aug 88 21:20:49 GMT
Local: Mon, Aug 22 1988 5:20 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <8...@smoke.ARPA> g...@brl.arpa (Doug Gwyn (VLD/VMB) <gwyn>) writes:

>In article <4...@saturn.ucsc.edu> jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger) writes:
>>The draft may not be 'badly broken' but is missing out on the opportunity
>>to make C a convenient language for numerical computing as well.

>The fundamental problem is that IT IS MUCH TOO LATE to be making
>significant changes to the proposed standard.

It seemed to me - and I admittedly did not follow it from the very beginning -
that it was always MUCH TOO LATE.

>It's easy to complain about other people's work; much easier than
>helping with the work.  I suggest that you GET INVOLVED in drafting
>the NEXT (revised) standard.

I certainly will.

Joseph Reger,   jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu


 
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Herman Rubin  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 8:48 am
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: c...@l.cc.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin)
Date: 23 Aug 88 12:48:34 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 8:48 am
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
In article <8...@smoke.ARPA>, g...@smoke.ARPA (Doug Gwyn ) writes:

I use C for numerical programming, and then have to edit the resulting .s
file.  All of the languages, including C, are woefully deficient is letting
the user use the capacities of the machines.  If C is to be a good flexible
language, the committee should widely advertise for complaints about the
deficiencies of the language before starting out.

I would have no trouble coming up with pages of these items.  But the last
time I did something like this, in reply to the open invitation to attend
the meeting on the IEEE floating-point convention, was to receive an invi-
tation to attend!  I do not have the time to attend meetings on software.

Another problem is that the language gurus are unsympathetic to ideas which
run counter to their perception of computing needs.  They see integer
arithmetic as primarily for addressing and looping; I see integer arithmetic
as important for number-crunching.  What about fixed-point (_not_ integer)
arithmetic?  What about the use of overflow?  What about division with
simultaneous quotient and remainder?  What about an operation or function
returning a string of values?  What about table-driven branches?  What
about inserting new operators, using the processor syntax to specify the
argument structure of these operators?  In fact, what about using the
easy-to-use hardware operators on most machines?  A good example is &~,
which is more useful than &, and is hardware on many machines, including
the ones for which C was initially written.  Many of those machines do not
even have a hardware &.

How many useful instructions have disappeared from hardware because they
do not occur in the HLLs?  Multiprecision arithmetic needs unsigned
multiplication and division to be efficient, and not floating point
arithmetic.  The presence of a single hardware instruction can be
essential to an algorithm being worthwhile; if the instruction is in
software, it is more likely to appear in hardware.
--
Herman Rubin, Dept. of Statistics, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette IN47907
Phone: (317)494-6054
hru...@l.cc.purdue.edu (Internet, bitnet, UUCP)


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C" by mcdon...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu
mcdonald  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 9:07 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.c
From: mcdon...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu
Date: 23 Aug 88 13:07:00 GMT
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C

>The fundamental problem is that IT IS MUCH TOO LATE to be making
>significant changes to the proposed standard.  Look at all the trouble
>I suggest that you GET INVOLVED in drafting
>the NEXT (revised) standard.

The problem is, how does one do this? IF you are a regular reader of this
august information dispersal system, you might here about some such
effort not too late after it gets started. But, in the absence of that,
you are going to know about it only AFTER the standard gets approved,
when the next version of your compiler comes out and your programs
stop compiling. I never heard about Fortran 77 until my programs
refused to run because a new compiler didn't support Hollerith fields.

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C" by Henry Spencer
Henry Spencer  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 12:17 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: he...@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer)
Date: Tue, 23 Aug 88 16:17:45 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 12:17 pm
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C

In article <59@radix> j...@radix.UUCP (Jim Valerio) writes:
>I found the responses to David Hough's comments in the last review cycle were
>often depressingly mechanical, unbalanced, and to my mind, unreasoned. ...

Little birdies tell me that the review of the second-round public comments
was, in general, awfully rushed.  It shows.
--
Intel CPUs are not defective,  |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
they just act that way.        | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry he...@zoo.toronto.edu

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Henry Spencer
Henry Spencer  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 12:45 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: he...@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer)
Date: Tue, 23 Aug 88 16:45:09 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 12:45 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <4...@saturn.ucsc.edu> jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger) writes:
>The draft may not be 'badly broken' but is missing out on the opportunity
>to make C a convenient language for numerical computing as well...

Well, remember two things.  First, that there was opportunity for input
along these lines earlier, and little was received; it is now much too late
for major changes.  Second, that X3J11's mission was to standardize an
existing language, not to invent a new one; they did make some small steps
toward making C friendlier for numerical work, and that is probably about
all one should expect from a standards committee.

If you really want to see C improved as a language for numerical computing,
the first thing to do is to scream at your compiler supplier until he/she/it
does some of the things you want.  Then, when the time rolls around for the
next revision of the C standard, you can propose changes based on *actual
experience*.  This will carry a lot more weight than untried inventions.
Given the time lags involved in all this, if you are serious about it, the
time to start haranguing your supplier is *now*.
--
Intel CPUs are not defective,  |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
they just act that way.        | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry he...@zoo.toronto.edu


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C" by Doug Gwyn
Doug Gwyn  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 12:56 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: g...@smoke.ARPA (Doug Gwyn )
Date: 23 Aug 88 16:56:15 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 12:56 pm
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C

In article <59@radix> j...@radix.UUCP (Jim Valerio) writes:
>I found the responses to David Hough's comments in the last review cycle were
>often depressingly mechanical, unbalanced, and to my mind, unreasoned.

The "mechanical" aspect may be partly due to the existence of a list of
"stock response codes" that the Committee uses for its convenience in
recording answers to issues raised.  In cases where the proposal was
rejected, there is also supposed to be additional explanation.  As it
happens, sometimes the additional explanation is not provided, or the
one provided makes no sense to the response document editor and reviewers,
so we have to try to provide additional explanation that reflects the
Committee's position as best as we understand it.  I will admit that
less-than-perfect responses are sometimes the result.

Also consider that a full rebuttal to a lengthy paper like Hough's
would take far more work than anyone was prepared to do.

>...  Compare this to the decision not to
>standardize hypot(), a function which exists on both BSD and SysV systems,
>a function the Committee called an "invention of limited utility".  Oddly
>enough, the complementary atan2() function is standardized; the Committee
>explains atan2() "can be used for purposes other than conversion to polar
>coordinates", an argument that actually seems to apply more correctly to
>hypot().

Although I favor standardizing hypot(), I have to say that I almost
never have found occasion to use it, unlike atan2() which is the main
inverse-trig function (if you find yourself using some other inverse-
trig function, odds are you made the wrong choice).

>I hope that Doug, and the Committee as a whole, will very carefully read
>and consider David Hough's comments in this coming review, and perhaps
>supply better considered and self-consistent responses than those that
>were provided in the previous review cycle.

I actually supported many of Hough's suggestions.  Unfortunately, out
of perhaps 30 to 40 voting members of the Committee, fewer than a dozen
have significant experience using C for large-scale floating-point
applications.  This makes it hard to "sell" improvements in this area.
Since the majority have little to gain (and their compiler/library work
would be increased) by making such changes, naturally such proposals
have a hard time obtaining the necessary 2/3 majority vote to be adopted.
In fact, only remedies for really glaring deficiencies have much chance
of gaining such a majority.  And at this stage of the process, any
substantive change has very little chance no matter how nice it might
have been if it had been incorporated in the proposed Standard earlier.

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Jerry Leic
Jerry Leic  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 12:57 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leic)
Date: 23 Aug 88 16:57:33 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 12:57 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <8...@l.cc.purdue.edu>, c...@l.cc.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin) writes...
>I use C for numerical programming, and then have to edit the resulting .s
>file.  All of the languages, including C, are woefully deficient is letting
>the user use the capacities of the machines.  If C is to be a good flexible
>language, the committee should widely advertise for complaints about the
>deficiencies of the language before starting out.

On the contrary:  C is NOT woefully deficient for the vast majority of
applications to which the vast majority of "paying users" are interested in
applying it.  As later comments make clear, the kinds of users Mr. Rubin has
in mind are rather different.  The fact of the matter is, hardly anyone thinks
that "fixed-point arithmetic" (as opposed to integer) is important.  It just
does not come up in the vast majority of uses to which computers are put.

Developing software is an expensive proposition.  Everything added to a
language has to be implemented somewhere, by someone.  Then it has to be
debugged, supported, and maintained.  There are only two ways this will
happen:  If someone is willing to pay for it; or when someone is willing
to do it out of their own love for the subject.

>I would have no trouble coming up with pages of these items.  But the last
>time I did something like this, in reply to the open invitation to attend
>the meeting on the IEEE floating-point convention, was to receive an invi-
>tation to attend!  I do not have the time to attend meetings on software.

Ah, so Mr. Rubin is willing to COMPLAIN, but he is NOT willing to do the work
out of his own love for the subject.  He certainly gives no indication that
he is willing (or able) to pay to have it done either.

>Another problem is that the language gurus are unsympathetic to ideas which
>run counter to their perception of computing needs.

I am a "language guru", though my interests happen to be in parallel program-
ming languages.  Again, why should I care what Mr. Rubin thinks "computing
needs" are when he can't provide money, isn't willing to invest his own time,
and can only provide the most specialized examples of what such features might
be used for?

>                                                  They see integer
>arithmetic as primarily for addressing and looping; I see integer arithmetic
>as important for number-crunching.  What about fixed-point (_not_ integer)
>arithmetic?  What about the use of overflow?  What about division with
>simultaneous quotient and remainder?  What about an operation or function
>returning a string of values?  What about table-driven branches?  What
>about inserting new operators, using the processor syntax to specify the
>argument structure of these operators?  In fact, what about using the
>easy-to-use hardware operators on most machines?  A good example is &~,
>which is more useful than &, and is hardware on many machines, including
>the ones for which C was initially written.  Many of those machines do not
>even have a hardware &.

What about all these things?  Being absolutely brutal about it:  Why should
I (or other readers) care?  What will it gain us to worry about this?

>How many useful instructions have disappeared from hardware because they
>do not occur in the HLLs?

Along the same brutal lines, my answer is:  No USEFUL instructions have
disappeared at all.  What has disappeared are a lot of non-essential ideas
that were tossed in back in the days when computer architecture was a new
field, with a large research component.  No one really knew what would turn
out to be "useful".

Well, for better or for worse, computer architecture isn't like that any more.
Computer design is a multi-billion dollar industry.  It is driven, not by what
people might WANT in some abstract sense, but by what they are willing and
able to pay for.  THAT is the only workable definition of "useful", and on
that scale the things Mr. Rubin wants have long ago fallen to the bottom of
the list.

>                        Multiprecision arithmetic needs unsigned
>multiplication and division to be efficient, and not floating point
>arithmetic.  The presence of a single hardware instruction can be
>essential to an algorithm being worthwhile; if the instruction is in
>software, it is more likely to appear in hardware.
>--
>Herman Rubin, Dept. of Statistics, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette IN47907
>Phone: (317)494-6054
>hru...@l.cc.purdue.edu (Internet, bitnet, UUCP)

It's painful to see economics dominating a field one loves and pushing it in
directions one is not inclined to go.  I'm not unsympathetic to Mr. Rubin's
position; my own background, way back when, is in mathematics (complex analy-
sis and a bit of analytic number theory).  Even the work I do now is beyond
the current "commercial" leading edge, and I am sometimes frustrated by the
way hardware manufacturers put roadblocks in the way of doing "obviously
useful" things, because they are too busy heading in other directions.  But
that's life.

The USEFUL thing for Mr. Rubin to do, if he really thinks these issues are
important, is to work at convincing others of it.  Not by complaining in this
and other newsgroups about how he is being ignored.  But exactly by spending
some time with those committees, by offering some real alternatives, by
showing how what he proposes is useful to people other than himself.  Frankly,
I doubt anything he can do will ever get major commercial ventures interested.
But that doesn't mean he can't get other researchers interested.  Many people
are able to design and build special-purpose hardware and software today; if
Mr. Rubin talked to some of them, he might discover that many good research
hardware hackers have the tools, but are lacking interesting problems.  I
will say, however, that his chances of getting people interested would improve
markedly if he stopped complaining about how he didn't "have the time to
attend meetings on software".  Very few computer scientists have the time to
attend meetings on statistics either.
                                                        -- Jerry


 
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Rahul Dhesi  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 7:26 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: dh...@bsu-cs.UUCP (Rahul Dhesi)
Date: 23 Aug 88 23:26:08 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 7:26 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
In article <8...@l.cc.purdue.edu> c...@l.cc.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin) writes:

[wish list for HLLs]

I agree that many of the features wished for ought to be in higher-
level languages.  But to put all of them in C would no longer leave
the relatively small, simple, low-level language that C was designed
to be.

Nearly all of the features that Herman Rubin wishes to see *are*
already in HLLs, only not all are in each HLL.  C++ has some.  Ada has
*many* of them, especially fixed point arithmetic and functions
returning structured values.

The real problem is not with C designers.  The real problem is with
Fortran designers, who have always had an explicit mandate to design a
language for scientific computing, and have continued to fail miserably
to achieve this.  In a way the C users who do numerical computing want
to put on C the burden that Fortran was supposedly designed to carry.

The trouble with doing so is that other users will lose.  Each new
feature added to a language increases the complexity of the language
translator, and *all* users, even those who don't need to use these
features, will pay in money, disk space, and CPU time.
--
Rahul Dhesi         UUCP:  <backbones>!{iuvax,pur-ee,uunet}!bsu-cs!dhesi


 
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Paul R. Haas  
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 More options Aug 23 1988, 7:34 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: p...@actnyc.UUCP (Paul R. Haas)
Date: 23 Aug 88 23:34:16 GMT
Local: Tues, Aug 23 1988 7:34 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
Given:
1. ANSI C (as proposed) does not support numerical computing adequately.
2. There is not enough time to fix it for the current standard.

There are several ways of coping:
1. Use Fortran.
2. Hope your compiler vendor comes up with reasonable extensions.
3. Do something to encourage your compiler vendor to come up with
   something reasonable.

I would favor writing a standard for "correct" math extensions to the C
language.  If the standard is adopted by at least one compiler vendor
(or producer so as to include the FSF) then you can show prior art for
the next round of X3J11.  If the "correct" math extensions are simple
enough to implement then many manufacturers will put it into their
compilers.

A proposal for a standard to be produced by an individual, an
independent committee or a committee from one of the user groups (ACM,
IEEE, /usr/group, Usenix, etc...).  A committee could meet in person
or electronically, etc...

Unfortunately, I lack the skills to produce such a document.
----
Paul Haas,  uunet!actnyc!prh (if that doesn't work: h...@msudoc.egr.msu.edu)


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C" by Doug Gwyn
Doug Gwyn  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 2:30 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.c
From: g...@smoke.ARPA (Doug Gwyn )
Date: 24 Aug 88 06:30:03 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 2:30 am
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C

In article <225800...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu> mcdon...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu writes:
>you are going to know about it only AFTER the standard gets approved,

I'm pretty sure the formation of X3J11 was announced in CACM, and it
has been well known in the C community for years (e.g. "The C Advisor"
and other regular columns).  I don't think it made the TV network news.

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Charles Marslett
Charles Marslett  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 2:47 am
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: ch...@killer.DALLAS.TX.US (Charles Marslett)
Date: 24 Aug 88 06:47:44 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 2:47 am
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
In article <36...@yale-celray.yale.UUCP>, leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu (Jerr writes:

> On the contrary:  C is NOT woefully deficient for the vast majority of
> applications to which the vast majority of "paying users" are interested in
> applying it.

I find this comment and the attitude of the author woefully parochial -- I do
not program in COBOL and I might not even recognize a either a data entry
language or a data base language if it hit me in the face, but I do know that
more money (real dollars, payroll hours or however you want to look at it) is
spent on programs that are much more difficult to write in C than in the
language they are written in (and in some cases -- heresy -- that language
is even 8086 assembly language!).  I am quite certain that spreadsheets
garner more user dollars than C compilers for any computers other than
Crays and Suns (and Fortran compilers are probable ahead of C compilers on
at least the Crays).

C is rapidly catching up with Pascal as the second most well known language
but it has a long way to go before it becomes as well know (and perhaps as
useful)as BASIC (more heresy?).

For my purposes, C is the language of choice most of the time (by a fair
margin -- I have no second choice, except maybe Modula were C to vanish
from the face of the earth).  But C is not a universal language and she
does not appear to be expanding into other areas of applicability any more
rapidly than her elder brother and sister, FORTRAN and LISP.  And I think this
is both A GOOD THING, and the reason that it is unlikely to be a major language
20 years from now.  I have plenty of spare time in 20 years to learn several
new small languages and I have no real need to program in Ada or PL/I.

(How do you like my personification of programming language? Shall we create
a few mythic tales to describe her birth?)

Charles Marslett
ch...@killer.dallas.tx.us


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C" by Steve C. Simmons
Steve C. Simmons  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 10:09 am
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: s...@itivax.UUCP (Steve C. Simmons)
Date: 24 Aug 88 14:09:14 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 10:09 am
Subject: Re: Commentary for third public review of X3J11 C
Re the numeric problems: I agree with your assessments.  But since
this is largely a library issue, it is possible to cure the problem
even with implementations that are seriously munged.  This is not
enough of an issue to make further delays in the standard.

There's no reason why a revision of the standard cannot begin almost
immediately.  Clearly the folks who need the numeric changes should
get together, formalize their needs, educate the rest of us on their
necessity, and propose it for the revision.

If we insist on making the changes in the *present* proposed standard,
I think we're looking at major delays.  Let's get the standard out
NOW, and tighten down the libraries later.
--
Steve Simmons           ...!umix!itivax!vax3!scs
Industrial Technology Institute, Ann Arbor, MI.
"You can't get here from here."


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Henry Spencer
Henry Spencer  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 12:18 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: he...@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer)
Date: Wed, 24 Aug 88 16:18:20 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 12:18 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <4...@saturn.ucsc.edu> jos...@chromo.ucsc.edu (Joseph Reger) writes:
>It seemed to me - and I admittedly did not follow it from the very beginning -
>that it was always MUCH TOO LATE.

X3J11 has been trying to get the %#@%$% thing out the door for quite some
time now.  The combination of lengthy public-review cycles and official
meetings held only quarterly means that a standard which needs *three*
public-review cycles will be in "almost finished, no substantive changes
without a damn good reason" status for a long time.  Sounds like you came
on the scene after that phase started.
--
Intel CPUs are not defective,  |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
they just act that way.        | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry he...@zoo.toronto.edu

 
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Ian L. Kaplan  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 1:40 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c
From: i...@argosy.UUCP (Ian L. Kaplan)
Date: 24 Aug 88 17:40:05 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 1:40 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

In article <3...@bsu-cs.UUCP> dh...@bsu-cs.UUCP (Rahul Dhesi) writes:

>The real problem is not with C designers.  The real problem is with
>Fortran designers, who have always had an explicit mandate to design a
>language for scientific computing, and have continued to fail miserably
>to achieve this.  In a way the C users who do numerical computing want
>to put on C the burden that Fortran was supposedly designed to carry.

  The Fortran 8x committee has its problems, but lack of features is
not one of them.  The April '87 Fortran draft standard includes a
number of "modern programming language" features, including something
like structures (referred to as derived types) and modules, with
imports and exports.  The real problem with the Fortran
standardization process is the in ability of the Fortran community to
arrive at a standard.  The decade is almost over.  Soon it will be
Fortran 9x.

                           Ian Kaplan

"I don't know what the most popular numeric programming language will
 look like in the year 2000, but it will be named Fortran."

           These opinions are my own.


 
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Chris Torek  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 2:12 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: ch...@mimsy.UUCP (Chris Torek)
Date: 24 Aug 88 18:12:07 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 2:12 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
In article <5...@killer.DALLAS.TX.US> ch...@killer.DALLAS.TX.US

(Charles Marslett) writes:
>In article <36...@yale-celray.yale.UUCP> leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu
>(Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu
>(Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu
>(Jerry Leichter (LEICHTER-JE...@CS.YALE.EDU)leich...@venus.ycc.yale.edu
>(Jerr writes:

[A rather unusual name :-) .]

>>On the contrary:  C is NOT woefully deficient for the vast majority of
>>applications to which the vast majority of "paying users" are interested in
>>applying it.

[back to chasm@killer:]

>I find this comment and the attitude of the author woefully parochial
>-- I do not program in COBOL and I might not even recognize a either a
>data entry language or a data base language if it hit me in the face,
>but I do know that more money ... is spent on programs that are [done
>in other languages] ....  C is not a universal language and she does
>not appear to be expanding into other areas of applicability any more
>rapidly than her elder brother and sister, FORTRAN and LISP.  And I
>think this is both A GOOD THING, and the reason that it is unlikely to
>be a major language 20 years from now.

This is curious, because I see Jerry Leichter and Charles Marslett as
basically in agreement---so why should this attitude be `woefully
parochial'?  That C does not make a good functional programming
language is no surprise; that people who pay for programs written in C
are not paying for such code should also be no surprise; and hence that
there is no great push for C to be augmented with everything out of
Miranda and FP combined should likewise be no surprise.

To return somewhat to the original subject:  If you believe that, with
a few tweaks that would either improve, or at least not damage, the
language, C could become an ideal language for numerical software, it
is then your job to demonstrate it.  Make the changes---write yourself
a compiler, or have someone else write it---and show that the new
language is better than the old.  If it is sufficiently better,
programmers will beat a path to your mailbox, and the new language will
become popular in the same way that C became popular.  And if *you* are
not willing to put in the effort, why then should *we* be?
--
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Univ of MD Comp Sci Dept (+1 301 454 7163)
Domain: ch...@mimsy.umd.edu    Path:   uunet!mimsy!chris


 
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Hank Dietz  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 3:01 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: ha...@pur-ee.UUCP (Hank Dietz)
Date: 24 Aug 88 19:01:33 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 3:01 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

        I've been using C for most programs since 1978.  I've taught and am
currently teaching a C programming course at Purdue University.  However, C
isn't supposed to be all things to everyone:  it is a systems programming
language and has little real competition as such (Ada? Modula 2?).

        Making C a numerical applications language has never been a priority,
nor should it be.  For example, fixed-point arithmetic would never be used
by most of the originally-intended C user community; it would simply clutter
the language definition and impede the development of good quality compilers.
I personally feel that X3J11 has done an outstanding job of resisting the
"kitchen sink" syndrome, keeping the language reasonably clean and
implementable, while resolving more than a few ambiguous/omitted details.
Propose a new language if you're not happy with any existing one.

        As for the language standardization process, if you're not willing
to attend the meetings nor to correspond in a reasonably formal way, I don't
think you've got much of a reason to complain.  Now, I'm a bit unhappy in
that I wasn't invited to be on X3J11 and would like to have had more input,
but even so I have had no trouble in getting X3J11 folk to listen to me.  My
number one remaining beef with X3J11 is that they changed the function
declaration syntax in an incompatible way without simultaneously providing
public-domain software to automatically convert old C programs to the new
notation...  but this is a problem I personally intend to remedy.

        So, let's not flame on about X3J11.  It isn't perfect, but it is C
and it is a better definition than we had before.  Enough said.

                                                        -hankd


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C" by Rob Carriere
Rob Carriere  
View profile  
 More options Aug 24 1988, 3:35 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.c
From: r...@raksha.eng.ohio-state.edu (Rob Carriere)
Date: 24 Aug 88 19:35:03 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 3:35 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C
In article <8...@smoke.ARPA> g...@brl.arpa (Doug Gwyn (VLD/VMB) <gwyn>) writes:

>In article <225800...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu> mcdon...@uxe.cso.uiuc.edu writes:
>>you are going to know about it only AFTER the standard gets approved,

>I'm pretty sure the formation of X3J11 was announced in CACM, and it
>has been well known in the C community for years (e.g. "The C Advisor"
>and other regular columns).  I don't think it made the TV network news.

Doubtless.  But we were talking about the numerical community, they
generally don't read CACM.  So, was it announced in, say publications
of the AAAS or the IEEE?  (NOTE: I'm not saying it wasn't, I don't
know, and I'm curious)

Rob Carriere


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)" by Steven Ryan
Steven Ryan  
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 More options Aug 24 1988, 5:53 pm
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: smr...@garth.UUCP (Steven Ryan)
Date: 24 Aug 88 21:53:32 GMT
Local: Wed, Aug 24 1988 5:53 pm
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)
Sounds like somebody wants an extensible C.

Are you crazy?

Extensibilty implies the gods are mortal and a rational mode system exists.

Shame for mentioning this is comp.lang.c.


 
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c.severijns  
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 More options Aug 25 1988, 3:29 am
Newsgroups: comp.std.c, comp.lang.c, comp.arch
From: tnv...@eutrc3.UUCP (c.severijns)
Date: 25 Aug 88 07:29:37 GMT
Local: Thurs, Aug 25 1988 3:29 am
Subject: Re: Third public review of X3J11 C (a scientist speaks up)

We have been using C for scientific computing for some time now and so far we
only feel the need for a very few changes to the language ( we use a non-ANSI
C compiler). One of these changes is already made in the ANSI standard, the
possibility to pass a float as an argument to a function. The second change
we would like to be made is the possibility to compile C with "intrinsic"
function to be able to use a floating point processor like the MC68881 more
efficiently. This requires only an extra option for the compiler.
For the rest we consider C a good language for scientific computing that
generates code that is not much slower than FORTRAN and has the advantage of
structures. In one case were we needed complex data structures our C version
turned out to be even more than twice as fast as a similar code in FORTRAN.

Camiel Severijns                                UUCP: mcvax!eutrc3!eutnv1!camiel
Surface Physics Group, Dept. of Physics
Eindhoven Universtiy of Technology
The Netherlands


 
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