Alexis Hocquenghem

Alexis Hocquenghem (14 January 1908 – 17 April 1990)[1] was a French mathematician. He is known for his discovery of Bose–Chaudhuri–Hocquenghem codes, today better known under the acronym BCH codes. This class of error correcting codes was published by Hocquenghem in 1959. The code also bears the names of R. C. Bose and D. K. Ray-Chaudhuri, who independently discovered these codes and published that result shortly afterwards, in 1960.[2]

Notes

  1. Service Bibliothèque de l'Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur: Auteur Alexis Hocquenghem (1908?–1990)
  2. Page 189, Reed, Irving, S. Error-Control Coding for Data Networks. Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 0-7923-8528-4.
gollark: Not infinite, but big.
gollark: Regxes can take stupidly large amounts of time to execute.
gollark: One common issue is accepting regexes from users.
gollark: JS, being not wildly memory-unsafe, makes it somewhat hard to "accidentally" do stuff, I guess.
gollark: No, just meddle with the minified output.

References

  • A. Hocquenghem. Codes correcteurs d'erreurs. Chiffres (Paris), 2:147–156, September 1959



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