dolmen 30 minutes ago

Latest Knuth preprint: "Fillomino Densities", dated 2026-07-01

From a previous preprint titled "Claude’s Cycle", dated 2026-02-28 [2]:

  It seems that I’ll have to revise my opinions about “generative AI” one of these days. What a joy it is to learn not only that my conjecture has a nice solution but also to celebrate this dramatic advance in automatic deduction and creative problem solving. I’ll try to tell the story briefly in this note.

[1] https://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/fillomino-...

[2] https://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/claude-cyc...

TheChaplain 3 hours ago

I am not a believer, but pray that whichever $DEITY is watching over Donald Knuth allows him a healthy and long life to reach the achievement of finishing volume 7.

  • Pet_Ant 51 minutes ago

    What he needs to do is start sketching the rest so that it can be finished after his death in his vision.

    • myst 46 minutes ago

      There’s no second Don Knuth vOv

  • kps 51 minutes ago

    I think there's a proof that he can at best asymptotically approach volume 7.

    • wolfi1 46 minutes ago

      but what distraction could it be now? There seems to be nothing to be done for TeX

      • kps 9 minutes ago

        The way I see it: Volume 7 is compilation. Since many optimization techniques are NP-complete, Knuth will have to take a break from writing TAOCP to settle whether or not P=NP.

klik99 1 hour ago

After years of dipping into random chapters for reference I read through the first 2.5 volumes sequentially until life got too busy. I plan on gifting the current full set to myself this xmas- but even if you just dip into it like a coffee table book it’s a wonderful read that breaks up tough sections with humor.

ocd 2 hours ago

I'm sure most of it is above my head, but I purchased the entire set in a mispricing for approximately ~$40 some time ago, and I'm really happy to have it in my library.

jdnier 40 minutes ago

From Future Plans...

> And after Volumes 1--5 are done, God willing, I plan to publish Volume 6 (the theory of context-free languages) and Volume 7 (Compiler techniques), but only if the things I want to say about those topics are still relevant and still haven't been said. Volumes 1--5 represent the central core of computer programming for sequential machines; the subjects of Volumes 6 and 7 are important but more specialized.

  • jdnier 37 minutes ago

    And about Volume 5...

    > Syntactic Algorithms, in preparation.

    9. Lexical scanning (includes also string search and data compression)

    10. Parsing techniques

jagged-chisel 4 hours ago

About $340 for the full set of eBooks.

Also: "Please do not tell me about errors that you find in an eBook, whether it's PDF or not, unless the same errors are present in a printed copy; such mistakes should be reported directly to the publisher."

Glad he thought to mention this, but I suspect his inbox will still be inundated.

  • fmajid 4 hours ago
    • WillAdams 3 hours ago

      E-mails which are sent in about the various books used to be printed out and responded to --- I got a $2.88 physical reward check for finding an error and a point of improvement in _Digital Typography_. Not sure how they are handled now. Trying to find an error or point of improvement in v4f7 so that I can get an account at:

      https://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/boss.html

      (usually, I do find errors in books, esp. e-books, which reminds me, I need to pick up the corrected 3rd printing of _The Fall of Arthur_ by J.R.R. Tolkien before I read it again, since that should have the error I found corrected).

      • fmajid 2 hours ago

        Yes, that article has an email for TAOCP corrections, that are processed by his secretary.

    • jagged-chisel 2 hours ago

      Inboxes don’t have to be digital. Inboxes, digital or physical, can be handled by other people.

      In any case, someone beyond the publisher will still get inundated with corrections about the PDFs and likely will demand their reward for it.

zerr 1 hour ago

The valuable prose aside, I never liked that code examples were in a pseudo assembly language.

  • commandlinefan 51 minutes ago

    There are M/MIX assemblers and interpreters you can download and run - in some ways they're better than "real" programming languages because they're explicitly for instruction so usability concerns like package managers and build automation support don't get in "the way" of operating them.

  • convolvatron 48 minutes ago

    consider the alternatives. it could have been written in PL-1 and rapidly become dated. or it could have been written in a slightly higher level custom language and that would also have to be taught and would be less clear about what was going on under the hood. or a kind of pseudo-code that would also admit ambiguity. or it could have been rewritten in pascal, and then java, and then javascript and then rust.

    given the timespan and the focus on complete analysis of running times and not just asymptotics, in the end maybe it wasn't so terrible a choice.

  • mghackerlady 44 minutes ago

    It's the only thing he could've done if he wanted the books to stand the test of time

philips 4 hours ago

Where can the books be found in PDFs for purchase?! First time I have heard of a non paperback novel.

Obviously I know I can probably find them on the high seas.

  • ndr 4 hours ago

    From TFA:

    > The authorized PDF versions can be purchased at www.informit.com/taocp

    • philips 4 hours ago

      Ha. Thank you! Strange it is only from one store.

      • disgruntledphd2 3 hours ago

        They're really good quality though (even if they are very expensive).

        • philips 2 hours ago

          Do they have wide margins like a printing or tight margins for tablets?

          • disgruntledphd2 48 minutes ago

            I can't remember right now, will check when I'm back at my home device.

small_model 3 hours ago

Don't feed the pdfs into Fable, compile a email of errors -> Knuth