Gérard Huet

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Gérard Huet
Born (1947-07-07) July 7, 1947
Bourges
Nationality French
Fields Mathematics
Alma mater Case Western Reserve University
University of Paris
Doctoral advisor George Ernst
Maurice Nivat
Doctoral students Thierry Coquand
Francois Fages
Jean-Marie Hullot
Xavier Leroy
Christine Paulin-Mohring
Didier Rémy

Gérard Pierre Huet (born July 7, 1947) is a French computer scientist.

Biography

Gérard Huet graduated from the Université Denis Diderot (Paris VII), Case Western Reserve University, and the Université de Paris.[citation needed]

His specialities are software architecture, design of programming languages and of proof assistants, project management, and international relations.[citation needed]

He is senior research director at INRIA, a member of the French Academy of Sciences, and a member of Academia Europaea. Formerly he was a Visiting Professor at Asian Institute of Technology in Bangkok, a Visiting Professor at Carnegie-Mellon University, and a Guest Researcher at SRI International.

He was the author of a unification algorithm for simply typed lambda calculus, and of a complete proof method for Church's theory of types (Constrained Resolution). He worked on the Mentor program editor in 1974–1977 with Gilles Kahn. He worked on the KB equational proof system in 1978–1984 with Jean-Marie Hullot. He led the Formel project in the 1980s, which developed the Caml programming language. He designed the Calculus of Constructions in 1984 with Thierry Coquand. He led the Coq project in the 1990s with Christine Paulin, who developed the Coq proof assistant. He invented the Zipper data structure in 1996. He was Head of International Relations for INRIA in 1996–2000. He designed the Zen Computational Linguistics toolkit in 2000–2004.

He organized the Institute of Logical Foundations of Functional Programming during the Year of Programming at the University of Texas in Austin in Spring 1987. He organised the Colloquium “Proving and Improving Programs’’ in Arc et Senans in 1975, the 5th International Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE) in Les Arcs in 1980, the Logic in Computer Science Symposium (LICS) in Paris in 1994, and the First International Symposium in Sanskrit Computational Linguistics in 2007. He was coordinator of the ESPRIT European projects Logical Frameworks, then TYPES, from 1990 to 1995.

He has made major contributions to the theory of unification and to the development of typed functional programming languages, in particular CAML. More recently he has been a scholar on computational linguistics in Sanskrit.[citation needed] In particular, he is working on Eilenberg machines and on the formal structure of Sanskrit.[1] He is webmaster of the Sanskrit Heritage Site.[2]

Publications

References

External links

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