A small reflection on the marvels of ancient writing...
Today, I went to the local Unix user group to see what that was like. I
was pleasantly surprised to find it quite rewarding. Learned some new
stuff... and won the door prize, a copy of a book entitled "Introducing
the UNIX System" by Henry McGilton and Rachel Morgan. I accepted the
prize, but said I'd just read it and recycle it for some other deserving
unix-phile. As it turns out, I'm not giving it back, I'll contribute
another Unix book. I thought it was just some intro unix text and
figured I might learn a thing or two and let someone else who needs it
more have it after I read it, but it's a V7 book! I haven't seem many of
those around and so, I started digging into it and do I ever wish I'd
had it when I was first trying to figure stuff out! Great book, never
heard of it, or its authors, but hey, I've only read a few thousand tech
books.
What was really fun, was where I went from there - the authors mentioned
some bit about permuted indexes and the programmer's manual... So, I
went and grabbed my copy off the shelf and lo and behold, my copy either
doesn't have a permuted index or I'm not finding it, I was crushed. But,
while I was digging around the manual, I came across Section 9 - Quick
UNIX Reference! Are you kidding me?!! How many years has it taken me to
gain what knowledge I have? and here, in 20 pages is the most concise
reference manual I've ever seen.
Just the SH, TROFF and NROFF sections are worth the effort of digging up
this 40 year old text.
Anyhow, following on the heels of a recent dive into v7 and Ritchie's
setting up unix v7 documentation, I was yet again reminded of the golden
age of well written technical documents. Oh and I guess my recent
perusal of more modern "heavy weight" texts (heavy by weight, not
content, and many hundreds of pages long) might have made me more
appreciative of concision - I long for the days of 300 page and shorter
technical books :). In case you think I overstate - just got through a
pair of TCL/TK books together clocking in at 1565 pages.
Thank you Henry McGilton, Rachel Morgan, and Dennis Ritchie and Steve
Bourne and other folks of the '70s and '80s for keeping it concise. As a
late to the party unix enthusiast, I greatly value your work and am
really thankful you didn't write like they do now...
Later,
Will