Edward Reingold

American computer scientist

Edward M. Reingold (born 1945) is a computer scientist active in the fields of algorithms, data structures, graph drawing, and calendrical calculations.

In 1996 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.[1]

In 2000 he retired from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and was a professor of computer science and applied mathematics at the Illinois Institute of Technology until his retirement in 2019.[2]

Works

He has co-authored the standard text on calendrical calculations, Calendrical Calculations, with Nachum Dershowitz.[3][4][5][6]

In 1981 he was the co-author, with John Tilford, of the canonical paper "Tidier Drawings of Trees" which described a method, now known as the Reingold-Tilford algorithm, to produce more aesthetically pleasing drawing of binary (and by extension, m-ary) trees [1].

References

  1. ^ ACM Fellow Award Citation, accessed 2011-09-19.
  2. ^ Faculty listing, Computer Science Dept., Illinois Institute of Technology, accessed 2015-08-23.
  3. ^ Edward M. Reingold and Nachum Dershowitz. Calendrical Calculations. Cambridge University Press; 3 edition (December 10, 2007). ISBN 978-0-521-88540-9
  4. ^ Review of Calendrical Calculations by E. G. Richards (1998), Nature 391: 33–34, doi:10.1038/34083.
  5. ^ Review of Calendrical Calculations by Robert Poole (1999), The British Journal for the History of Science 32 (1): 116–118, JSTOR 4027975.
  6. ^ Review of Calendrical Calculations by N. M. Swerdlow (1998), IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 20 (3): 78, doi:10.1109/MAHC.1998.707580.
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