Transcription of COMPUTER SCIENCE: THE DISCIPLINE
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COMPUTER SCIENCE: THE DISCIPLINE . Peter J. Denning August 1997. Revised July 1999. Copyright 1999 by Peter J. Denning. You may make one exact copy for personal use. Any other copying or distribution requires explicit permission. This article will appear in the 2000 Edition of Encyclopedia of COMPUTER Science (A. Ralston and D. Hemmendinger, Eds). The computing profession is the people and institutions that have been created to take care of other people's concerns in information processing and coordination through worldwide communication systems. The profession contains various specialties such as COMPUTER science, COMPUTER engineering, software engineering, information systems, domain-specific applications, and COMPUTER systems. The DISCIPLINE of COMPUTER science is the body of knowledge and practices used by computing professionals in their work. This article, with many cross-references to other articles in this encyclopedia, discusses these aspects of the profession and the relations among them.
-2-This common characterization is too austere. It only hints at the full richness of the discipline. It does not call attention to the connections between
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