The Story of Mel

The Story of Mel is an archetypical piece of computer programming folklore. Its subject, Mel Kaye, is an exemplary Real Programmer whose subtle techniques fascinate his colleagues.

Story

Ed Nather’s The Story of Mel details the extraordinary programming prowess of a former colleague of his, "Mel", at Royal McBee Computer Corporation.[1][2] Although originally written in prose, Nather’s story was modified by someone into a "free verse" form which has become widespread.[3][4]

Little is known about Mel Kaye, beyond the fact that he was credited with doing the "bulk of the programming" on the 1959 ACT-1 compiler for the Royal McBee LGP-30 computer.[5][6] In Nather's story, Kaye is portrayed as being prone to avoiding optimizing assemblers in favor of crafting code to take advantage of hardware quirks, for example taking advantage of the rotation of the LGP-30's drum memory to avoid writing delay loops into the code.

The story as written by Nather involved Kaye's work on rewriting a blackjack program from the LGP-30 to a newer Royal McBee system, the RPC-4000; company sales executives had requested to modify the program so that they could flip a front panel switch and cause the program to lose (and the user to win). Kaye reluctantly acceded to the request, but to his own delight, he got the test wrong, and the switch would instead cause the program to win every time (and the user to lose).

Subsequent to Kaye's departure, Nather was asked to fix the bug. While examining the code, he was puzzled to discover that it contained what appeared to be an infinite loop, yet control did not remain inside the loop. Eventually he realized that Kaye was using self-modifying code to process elements of an array, and had coded the loop in such a way as to take advantage of an overflow. Adding 1 to the address field of an instruction that referred to address x normally just changed the address to x+1. But when x was already the highest possible address, not only did the address wrap around to 0, but a 1 was carried into the bits from which the opcode would be readin this case changing the opcode to "jump to" so that the full instruction became "jump to address 0". This impressed Nather so much that, out of respect, he gave up the task and reported that he could not find the bug.

History

The essay was originally published in the Usenet news group "net.followup" on May 21, 1983 by utastro!nather (the email address of Ed Nather at the time).[1][2]

The Royal McBee computers were developed and manufactured by Librascope, and the documentation written for the blackjack program was written by Mel Kaye of Librascope Inc. The August 1956 edition of the Librazette, the Librascope newsletter, contains a story about training on the LGP-30, and mentions that some Librascope application engineers were transferred to the Royal McBee payroll. Among the engineers named is Mel Kaye.[7]

There is a photograph on the front page of that issue showing that first class of neophyte LGP-30 programmers and the instructors, including Mel Kaye.[8]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Raymond, Eric S., ed. (1992-07-01). "The Jargon File, Version 2.9.10, 01 Jul 1992 (jargon2910.ascii.gz)". line 20505. Archived from the original on 2017-03-09. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
  2. 1 2 Matt Crawford The realest programmer of all Newsgroup: net.jokes November 20, 1984.
  3. The Story of Mel free verse version
  4. "The Story of Mel, A Real Programmer, Annotated". www.cs.utah.edu.
  5. "New Light on the Legend of Mel", 1 Jun 1994, alt.folklore.computers, Bill von Hagen
  6. "In particular, Mel Kaye of Royal McBee...", FOLDOC, imperial.ac.uk
  7. "Librascope Memories" (PDF). The Librazette. Librascope Inc.
  8. "Mel Kaye in the first LGP-30 training class". the Librazette. Librascope Inc.

Further reading

  • utastro!nather (1983-05-21), The Story of Mel - A recent article devoted to the *macho* side of programming made the bald and unvarnished statement: Real Programmers write in Fortran., Greg Lindahl, archived from the original on 2017-03-09, retrieved 2017-03-09 (NB. A copy of the original prose version.)
  • utastro!nather (1983-05-21), re: Real Programmers ..., Rob Stampfli, retrieved 2018-02-11 (A completely original copy of Ed Nather's Usenet post, with headers)
  • Nather, Ed (2003-09-12) [1983-05-21], The story of Mel, a Real Programmer, FOLDOC, archived from the original on 2017-03-09, retrieved 2017-03-09 (NB. Punctuation added/corrected for readability. Contains link to program tape of blackjack for LGP-30)
  • Jennings, Tom, ed. (2000-11-30) [1956-10-18], Mel the Programmer: LGP-30 Coding Sheet - Program 13.0, archived from the original on 2017-03-09, retrieved 2017-03-09 (Mel Kaye's signature] on a coding sheet for the LGP-30.)
  • Kaye, Mel, Manual for Blackjack Game (PDF), USA: Librascope, Inc., RPC-4000 Program W1-01.0, archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-03-09, retrieved 2017-03-08 (NB. Presumably the subject of the original story.)
  • Seibel, James (2015-04-08), 'The Story of Mel' Explained, retrieved 2018-02-18 (NB. Detailed analysis of the story, explaining the technical details.)
    • "Macho programmers, drum memory and a forensic analysis of 1960s machine code". freeCodeCamp.org. 2 April 2018. Contains even more technical details
  • van den Bogaard, Adrienne (2008). "Stijlen van programmeren 1952-1972". Studium. 2: 128-144. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
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