Roger D. Moore (November 16, 1939 – March 21, 2019) was the 1973 recipient (with Larry Breed and Richard Lathwell) of the Grace Murray Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). It was given "for their work in the design and implementation of APL\360, setting new standards in simplicity, efficiency, reliability and response time for interactive systems."[1]
Roger D. Moore was born in Redlands, California. Before graduation, he worked as an operator of the Burroughs 220 computer at Stanford. During this time he provided some support for Larry Breed’s card stunt system.[2] He also spent time studying the Burroughs 220 BALGOL compiler. This resulted in BUTTERFLY which was described by George Forsythe:
Each grader program was written as a BALGOL-language procedure. It was then compiled together with a procedure called BUTTERFLY, written by Moore. The result was a relocatable machine-language procedure, with a mechanism for equating its variables to variables of any BALGOL program, in just the form of the BALGOL compiler’s own machine-language library procedures (SIN, WRITE, READ, etc.).[3]
Forsythe anticipated a problem as described by Bob Braden:
BALGOL at Stanford outlived the B220 hardware. In 1962 Stanford contracted with IBM to obtain an IBM 7090 for campus computing. This created great consternation in Forsythe’s office. A significant body of faculty and students was now familiar with BALGOL, and the high compiling speed of the BAC was vital in an academic environment. To subject this community to the production-oriented system software offered by IBM, including a slow Fortran compiler and cumbersome operating system, would have moved academic computing at Stanford backward by several years.[4]
To address this problem, in December 1961, Moore was hired by Forsythe to work on the SUBALGOL compiler for the IBM 7090.[5] Braden and Breed were hired soon afterward.
In December 1964 most employees of Ferranti-Packard's computer group were laid off. Along with six other former FP employees he formed I. P. Sharp Associates. He was vice-president from incorporation to his retirement in 1989.
Lastly, APL\360 owes much of its superior time-sharing performance to Roger D. Moore, of I.P. Sharp Associates, Toronto, who was principally responsible for the supervisor. Its design has not been described to the extent it deserves.[9] This team received the Grace Murray Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). It was given: "For their work in the design and implementation of APL\360, setting new standards in simplicity, efficiency, reliability and response time for interactive systems."[1]
In 1970, Moore became project leader of IPSA's speculative DOS/360COBOL compiler project.[10][11][12] Although the compiler had satisfactory performance, the market did not accept it.
In 1984, IPSA released Sharp APL for the IBM PC.[14] This package included a 370emulator written by Moore.
Retirement
After retiring from IPSA in early 1989, he became interested in opera and chamber music.[15] Along with attending many performances, he has supported concerts,[16][17][18][19] commissions and advanced music education.[20][21][22] He died in Toronto on March 21, 2019.[23][24]
^Montalbano, Michael S. (October 1982). "A Personal History of APL". Facts and stories about Antique (lonesome) Computers. Ed Thelen. Retrieved March 1, 2018.
^David Clements (host), Phil Abrams, Larry Breed, Adin Falkoff, Ken Iverson, Roger Moore. The Origins of APL - 1974 - YouTube. Coast Community College District. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved January 8, 2015.