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Knuth reward checks are checks or check-like certificates awarded by computer scientist
Donald Knuth Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; born January 10, 1938) is an American computer scientist, mathematician, and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He is the 1974 recipient of the ACM Turing Award, informally considered the Nobel Prize of computer ...
for finding technical, typographical, or historical errors, or making substantial suggestions for his publications. The ''
MIT Technology Review ''MIT Technology Review'' is a bimonthly magazine wholly owned by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and editorially independent of the university. It was founded in 1899 as ''The Technology Review'', and was re-launched without "The" in ...
'' describes the checks as "among computerdom's most prized trophies".


History

Initially, Knuth sent real, negotiable checks to recipients. He stopped doing so in October 2008 because of problems with check fraud. As a replacement, he started his own "Bank of San Serriffe", in the fictional nation of
San Serriffe San Serriffe is a fictional island nation invented for April Fools' Day 1977, by Britain's '' The Guardian'' newspaper.'' The Guardian'Special Report: San Serriffe. 1 April 1977 It was featured in a seven-page hoax supplement, published in the ...
, which keeps an account for everyone who found an error since 2006. Knuth now sends out "hexadecimal certificates" instead of negotiable checks. , Knuth reported having written more than 2,000 checks, with an average value exceeding $8 per check.Donald Knuth (2002),
All questions answered
", '' Notices of the AMS'' 49(3): 318-324.
, the total value of the checks signed by Knuth was over $20,000. Very few of these checks were actually cashed, even the largest ones. More often they have been framed and kept as "bragging rights".Kara Platoni,
Love at First Byte
", ''Stanford Magazine'', May–June 2006
Th


Amount

In the preface of each of his books and on his website, Knuth offers a reward of $2.56 ( USD) to the first person to find each error in his published books, whether it be technical, typographical, or historical. Knuth explains that $2.56, or 256 cents, corresponds to one
hexadecimal In mathematics and computing, the hexadecimal (also base-16 or simply hex) numeral system is a positional numeral system that represents numbers using a radix (base) of 16. Unlike the decimal system representing numbers using 10 symbols, h ...
dollar. "Valuable suggestions" are worth 32 cents, or the value of an error (0.2 hexadecimal dollars or 20 hexadecimal cents). In his earlier books a smaller reward was offered. For example, the 2nd edition of ''
The Art of Computer Programming ''The Art of Computer Programming'' (''TAOCP'') is a comprehensive monograph written by the computer scientist Donald Knuth presenting programming algorithms and their analysis. Volumes 1–5 are intended to represent the central core of comp ...
, Volume 1'', offered $2.00. The reward for coding errors found in Knuth's TeX and Metafont programs (as distinguished from errors in Knuth's books) followed an audacious scheme inspired by the Wheat and Chessboard Problem. It started at $2.56, and doubled every year until it reached $327.68. Recipients of this "sweepstakes" reward include Chris Thompson (Cambridge) and Bogusław L. Jackowski (Gdańsk), and also Peter Breitenlohner on 20 March 1995. Each check's memo field identifies the book and page number. 1.23 indicates an error on page 23 of Volume 1. (1.23) indicates a valuable suggestion on that page. The symbol Θ denotes the book '' Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About'', KLR denotes the book ''Mathematical Writing'' (by Knuth, Larrabee, and Roberts), GKP and CM denote the book '' Concrete Mathematics'' (by Graham, Knuth, and Patashnik), f1 denotes fascicle 1, CMT denotes the book ''Computer Modern Typefaces'', DT denotes the book ''Digital Typography'', SN denotes ''Surreal Numbers'', CWEB denotes the book ''The CWEB System of Structured Documentation'', DA denotes the book ''Selected Papers on Design of Algorithms'', FG denotes the book ''Selected Papers on Fun and Games'', and MM denotes the book ''MMIXware - A RISC Computer for the Third Millennium''.


Delays

Knuth is often unable to answer immediately when a reader finds a mistake in one of his books or programs. In some cases, the delay has been several years. For example, on 1 July 1996, Knuth sent out more than 250 letters, 125 of which contained checks, for errors reported in ''
The Art of Computer Programming ''The Art of Computer Programming'' (''TAOCP'') is a comprehensive monograph written by the computer scientist Donald Knuth presenting programming algorithms and their analysis. Volumes 1–5 are intended to represent the central core of comp ...
'' since the summer of 1981. A few of these remain unclaimed as of May 2006.What is your current mailing address?
on Don Knuth's website.
When Knuth is not able to reply immediately, he adds 5% interest, compounded continuously, to the reward.


See also

* List of computer-related awards * Erdős's problems


References


External links


The Bank of San Serriffe
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Knuth Reward Check Challenge awards Computer-related awards Donald Knuth