1:41 PM
I've been researching post- asking that question and have found a number of sources, some written by rather reputable figures.
Perhaps the most clear on this subject is mcdowella.demon.co.uk/Patricia.html. Though it's not reputable, it mentions TAOCP by Knuth, which I'm reading as I write here.
I also dug up the original paper defining PATRICIA: mendeley.com/catalog/… ... It seems like the libstdc++ reference is a rather inaccurate one.
1:59 PM
2 hours later…
3:52 PM
I'm sure as a professor you're well aware that most sources aren't reputable, and at some point you've studied a method to determine the usefulness and reliability of an article. Sometimes people write said articles because it makes them feel adequate and intelligent, not necessarily because they want to help people. They're often not concerned about any errors that are in their articles; In fact, if you try to point them to reputable sources they'll often deny, block, delete...
One way that some of these people tend to respond is with the age or reputation retort: "I've been in the industry for longer than you have", or "I'm older than you", so "That makes everything I say correct". I encounter that logic a lot, and it's unfortunate that most fool for it. It's not how long you spend learning, but how seriously you apply yourself.
For example, a student who barely passes and through his/her connections, manages to become a professor, is no more educated than a hobbyist who has never been to school, and has no interest in appearing educated in his/her field of interest.
It's the humble professors, who consider learning religion or way of life, the professors who learn along-side their students and consider their students to be peers, who make studying truly enjoyable... The professors who encourage students to "correct me when I'm wrong, because nobody's perfect"... Even the professors who will, if only to uphold their reputation, make an effort to acknowlege mistakes rather than ignoring them or pushing them away are bearable.
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