Philip Wadler From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Phil Wadler Wadler2.JPG Philip Wadler before a lecture at the University of Edinburgh. Born Philip Lee Wadler April 8, 1956 (age 65) Alma mater Stanford University (BSc) Carnegie Mellon University (PhD) Awards FRSE (2005) [1] ACM Fellow (2007) [2] Scientific career Fields Programming languages[3] Institutions University of Edinburgh Avaya Labs Bell Labs University of Glasgow University of Sydney University of Copenhagen University of Oxford Chalmers University of Technology Carnegie Mellon University Stanford University Thesis Listlessness is Better than Laziness: An Algorithm that Transforms Applicative Programs to Eliminate Intermediate Lists (1984) Doctoral advisor Nico Habermann[4] Doctoral students Ezra Cooper[4] Kei Davis[4] DeLesley Hutchins[5] David R. Lester[6][4] Philip Trinder[4] Jeremy Yallop[7] Website wadler.blogspot.com homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler Philip Lee Wadler (born April 8, 1956) is an American computer scientist known for his contributions to programming language design and type theory. In particular, he has contributed to the theory behind functional programming[8][failed verification] and the use of monads in functional programming, the design of the purely functional language Haskell,[9] and the XQuery declarative query language. In 1984, he created the Orwell programming language. Wadler was involved in adding generic types to Java 5.0.[10] He is also author of the paper Theorems for free![11] that gave rise to much research on functional language optimization (see also Parametricity). Contents 1 Education 2 Research and career 3 Awards and honours 4 References 5 External links Education Wadler received a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics from Stanford University in 1977, and a Master of Science degree in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1979.[12] He completed his Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University in 1984. His thesis was entitled Listlessness is Better than Laziness and was supervised by Nico Habermann.[13][4] Research and career Wadler's research interests[14][3][15] are in programming languages.[10][16] Wadler was a research fellow at the Programming Research Group (part of the Oxford University Computing Laboratory) and St Cross College, Oxford during 1983–87.[12] He was progressively lecturer, reader, and professor at the University of Glasgow from 1987 to 1996. Wadler was a member of technical staff at Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies (1996–99) and then at Avaya Labs (1999–2003). Since 2003, he has been professor of theoretical computer science in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh.[17] Wadler was editor of the Journal of Functional Programming from 1990 to 2004. Wadler is currently[when?] working on a new functional language designed for writing web applications, called Links.[18] He has supervised numerous doctoral students to completion.[4][5][6][7] Since 2003, Wadler has been a professor of theoretical computer science at the Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science at the University of Edinburgh and is the chair of Theoretical Computer Science.[19] He is also a member of the university's Blockchain Technology Laboratory.[20][21] He has a h-index of 70 with 24,447 citations at Google Scholar.[22] As of December 2018 Wadler was area leader for programming languages at IOHK, a blockchain development firm.[23] Awards and honours Wadler received the Most Influential POPL Paper Award in 2003 for the 1993 POPL Symposium paper Imperative Functional Programming, jointly with Simon Peyton Jones.[12][24] In 2005, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[1] In 2007, he was inducted as an ACM Fellow by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).[2]