DocumentCode
3557674
Title
The Evolution of Babbage´s Calculating Engines
Author
Bromley, Allan G.
Volume
9
Issue
2
fYear
1987
Firstpage
113
Lastpage
136
Abstract
This paper traces the evolution of Charles Babbage´s design ideas for automatic computing machines from Difference Engine No. 1 (1822-1833), through the Analytical Engine (1834-1846), to Difference Engine No. 2 (1846-1847). The design evolution is discussed from four essentially hierarchically related points of view: (1) mechanism - the basic mechanical apparatus for storing, transferring, and adding numbers; (2) architecture - the arrangement and interconnection of the basic mechanisms in the complete design; (3) algorithms - the functional utilization of the basic mechanism in carrying out such operations as multiplication, division, and signed addition (the microprogram or register-transfer level of description); (4) programs - the user-level application of the machine in solving such problems as tabulating series or solving simultaneous equations. The paper examines how developments at each level interacted in the design of the Analytical Engine. It also discusses the ways Babbage´s designs anticipated, or failed to anticipate, modern computer designs.
Keywords
Algorithm design and analysis; Application software; Difference engines; Equations; Hardware; History; Mathematics; Microprogramming; Software algorithms;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Annals of the History of Computing
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0164-1239
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MAHC.1987.10013
Filename
4640416
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