HN Theater @HNTheaterMonth

The best talks and videos of Hacker News.

Hacker News Comments on
Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth—"Universal Commafree Codes" (2015)

stanfordonline · Youtube · 97 HN points · 1 HN comments
HN Theater has aggregated all Hacker News stories and comments that mention stanfordonline's video "Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth—"Universal Commafree Codes" (2015)".
Youtube Summary
Donald Knuth's 21st Annual Christmas Lecture: Universal Commafree Codes
December 3, 2015

A commafree code is a set of codewords that can be read easily without spaces or other delimiters between words.

In 1965, Willard Eastman discovered a beautiful but underappreciated way to construct commafree block codes of all odd lengths, over an infinite alphabet. Professor Knuth will explain his construction and its interesting connection to questions of iteration versus recursion.

Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus of the Art of Computer Programming at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

Learn more: http://scpd.stanford.edu/free-stuff/engineering-archives/donald-e-knuth-lectures
HN Theater Rankings

Hacker News Stories and Comments

All the comments and stories posted to Hacker News that reference this video.
Donald Knuth's annual Christmas lecture at Stanford was just released on YouTube a few days ago. It's about comma-free codes, a similar idea to this bug: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48iJx8FVuis
Dec 07, 2015 · 97 points, 17 comments · submitted by cranium
Jabbles
Does anyone know why Knuth is writing some form of C? AFAIK none of the other TAOCP contain C, or anything other than (M)MIX and pseudocode. Why change now?
kazinator
Knuth has been using C for quite a long time now (he has not "changed now"), and it's fair to say that he likes it, based on the following:

More than 20 years ago, knuth ported his literate programming system to C, resulting in CWEB.

Here is a 1993 interview with Knuth about CWEB: http://tex.loria.fr/historique/interviews/knuth-clb1993.html

Key quote (on the subject of C):

I think C has a lot of features that are very important. The way C handles pointers, for example, was a brilliant innovation; it solved a lot of problems that we had before in data structuring and made the programs look good afterwards. C isn't the perfect language, no language is, but I think it has a lot of virtues, and you can avoid the parts you don't like. I do like C as a language, especially because it blends in with the operating system (if you're using UNIX, for example).

I can only guess that Knuth doesn't use C in TAOCP because C isn't defined in the kind of way that he thinks is suitable for teaching. Every port of C to some given architecture has different parameters which effectively render it a different dialect, and there are undefined behaviors all over the place.

JonathonW
I haven't watched through the whole thing, but the C code I saw from skipping through looks like it's actually the output from CWEB [1], one of Knuth's literate programming tools. It combines C source code with long-form documentation, and it can either be preprocessed to TeX (to give that nice, pretty printed document that Knuth shows in the video) or to standard C source code to compile and run.

CWEB is one of Knuth's languages of choice, and he's got tons of code written in it on his website [2], including versions of some of the stuff he's demoing on-screen.

[1] http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~uno/cweb.html

[2] http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~uno/programs.html

nikisweeting
I was present and unfortunately didn't understand the lecture till I looked up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huffman_coding halfway through. It was very interesting after that point though!
None
None
lechevalierd3on
For once a news headline with "Donald" not matching Trump.
coliveira
Usually I don't have any objection against the word Christmas. But in this case I think it is abusive: this talk is not about Christmas and it is not on Christmas day or even close. It seems just a random way of adding the word Christmas to a seminar, maybe only because the speaker happens to be Christian... I would like to believe that Stanford is above this kind of behavior, but sadly it is not.
spenczar5
As he says in the first 30 seconds of the video, the lecture has been called the "Annual Christmas Tree Lecture" for 20 years, and it was always a lecture about trees in computer science as a bit of a pun. Dr. Knuth said - again, right at the start - that he had trouble finding a good tree-related subject, so he dropped "tree" from the name.
bdamm
Why should the Christian speaker drop Christmas from the seminar title? It's his seminar, and he gets to decide what to title it. In fact, I think it is offensive to suggest that Christians should sterilize Christian history and iconography from anything they produce.

If Donald Knuth decided that his Christian iconography was interfering with the message he wanted to send, then it's his talk and he gets to decide to change the title.

If a Jewish/Christian/Muslim professor wants to talk about the 9 Lifos of the Menorah, I don't see a problem with that, either.

timthorn
The concept of a Christmas Lecture (or lecture series) as an accessible exposition of a topic is very well established - Faraday kicked them off in 1825 at the Royal Institution.
copperx
Probably you had a rough Monday and wanted to take it out on HN. If you're being serious, why do you think such trivialities merit discussion? or even a second of your attention? it boggles my mind.

We all have intrusive thoughts from time to time, but it is extremely bad form to voice them.

None
None
resist_futility
Sorry they forgot that everything has to be secular just for you.
udev
Jesus, calm down!

(Oops!)

dang
Please let's keep religious flamewars off of HN. Bikeshedding, too, while we're at it.
gPphX
The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures are a series of lectures on a single topic, held since 1825, presented scientific subjects to a general audience, in an informative and entertaining manner. Michael Faraday initiated the first Christmas Lecture series in 1825.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Faraday

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Institution_Christmas_Le...

nafizh
Saw Donald. Thought, Not again!! Trump at hacker news too!!
weinzierl
If commafree doesn't ring a bell maybe self-synchronizing does.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prefix_code

kazinator
Indeed. This is useful for picking up a transmission in mid-stream at an arbitrary boundary. Or discovering the start of a sector on a disk, as it spins past the read head, spewing whatever bits it finds.
HN Theater is an independent project and is not operated by Y Combinator or any of the video hosting platforms linked to on this site.
~ yaj@
;laksdfhjdhksalkfj more things
yahnd.com ~ Privacy Policy ~
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.