Andrew R. Koenig | |
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Born | June 1952 (age 64–65) New York, New York, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Columbia University (B.S., M.S.) |
Occupation | Computer scientist |
Known for | C++, programming, writing, "Koenig lookup", "anti-pattern" |
Notable work |
C Traps and Pitfalls (1988) Ruminations on C++ (1997) Accelerated C++ (2000) |
Parent(s) | Seymour H. Koenig Harriet Koenig |
Website | http://www.acceleratedcpp.com/authors/koenig |
Andrew Richard Koenig (IPA: [ˈkøːnɪç]; born June 1952) is a former AT&T and Bell Labs researcher and programmer. He is the author of C Traps and Pitfalls, co-author (with Barbara Moo) of Accelerated C++ and Ruminations on C++, and his name is associated with argument-dependent name lookup, also known as "Koenig lookup". He served as the Project Editor of the ISO/ANSI standards committee for C++, has authored over 150 papers on C++, and is listed as inventor on four patents. He is also a member of both American Mensa and Triple Nine Society.
Koenig was born in New York City, and is the son of the physicist, Dr. Seymour H. Koenig, a former director of the IBM Watson Laboratory, and Harriet Koenig, an author and collector of Native American Indian art.
He graduated from The Bronx High School of Science in 1968 and went on to receive a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Science degree from Columbia University in New York. He was a prominent member of the Columbia University Center for Computing Activities (CUCCA) in the late 1960s and 1970s. He wrote the first e-mail program used at the university.
In 1977, he joined the technical staff of Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, from which he later retired.
The first book he authored, in 1987, C Traps and Pitfalls, had been motivated by his prior paper and work, mostly as a staff member at Columbia University, on a different computer language, PL/I. In 1977, as a recently hired staff member at Bell Labs, he presented a paper called "PL/I Traps and Pitfalls" at a SHARE meeting in Washington, D.C.