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m Robot - Speedily moving category Scheme programming language to Category:Scheme (programming language) per CFDS. |
m →Carl Hewitt, the Actor model, and the birth of Scheme: replace/remove deprecated cs1|2 parameters; using AWB |
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In 1971 Sussman, [[Drew McDermott]], and [[Eugene Charniak]] had developed a system called [[Planner_(programming_language)#Micro-planner_implementation|Micro-Planner]] which was a partial and somewhat unsatisfactory implementation of Planner. Sussman and Hewitt worked together along with others on [[MDL (programming language)|Muddle (later MDL)]], an extended Lisp which formed a component of Hewitt's ambitious [[Planner (programming language)|Planner]] project. Drew McDermott, and Sussman in 1972 developed the Lisp-based language Conniver, which revised the use of automatic backtracking in Planner which they thought was unproductive. Hewitt was dubious that the "hairy control structure" in Conniver was a solution to the problems with Planner. Pat Hayes remarked: "Their [Sussman and McDermott] solution, to give the user access to the implementation primitives of Planner, is however, something of a retrograde step (what are Conniver's semantics?)"<ref>Pat Hayes Some Problems and Non-Problems in Representation Theory AISB’74.</ref>
In November 1972, Hewitt and his students invented the [[Actor model]] of computation as a solution to the problems with Planner.<ref name="hewitt1973">{{cite journal|author=Carl Hewitt |
| author = [[Gerald Jay Sussman]] and [[Guy L. Steele, Jr.]]
|date=December 1998
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