A Tribute from Stephen Wolfram

Stephen Wolfram wrote the following tribute to Robby.

With the tragic death of Robby Villegas, the world has lost an exceptional mind, and one of the great scholars and guardians of the Mathematica language. It was June 6, 1992, on a pleasant sunny day, just after an honorary degree ceremony at Knox College in Galesberg, Illinois. An eager young man who had just received his own degree came up to me, keen to tell me that he thought that the design of the function Outer[] in Mathematica was inadequate, and needed to be enhanced. We talked for quite a while. And eventually I said, “So what are you doing now that you’ve graduated? We’re hiring people at our company to work on Mathematica; you should come and join us.” And so it was that on June 29, 1992, Robby Villegas came to join Wolfram Research.

In the 15 years that followed, my email archive records more than 10,000 messages that include his name, with the number peaking in 1995. The syntax and semantics of a zillion functions. Ideas for extending, generalizing, clarifying features in Mathematica. A vast amount of work concerned with getting things in Mathematica just right. In making everything as clean and logical as it could be. In many ways, Robby Villegas was the first full-time design analyst for Mathematica. I think he personally knew every function in the system—its character, and its quirks.

And pretty soon when people were discussing some abstruse (or not so abstruse) potential feature of some new Mathematica function, I would just say, “Ask Robby; he’ll be able to figure it out.”

Robby Villegas contributed a great many ideas to Mathematica. To list manipulation and functional programming operations. And to mathematical typesetting, and the MathML web standard.

We have been lucky enough with Mathematica to be able to build a very pure and robust intellectual structure, that we can progressively add to over the years. Robby Villegas was the architect of some of the most demanding and elegant sections of this structure.

I remember one day when we were discussing some function or another, and someone was saying that we should do something in a particular way, because that’s how some other function in Mathematica worked. And Robby Villegas said that perhaps that precedent was not so good, because that other function was designed very early in the history of Mathematica, when designs were rougher.

And in that moment I realized that Robby Villegas had become the first true scholar of the Mathematica language. With an understanding not only of its current structure, but also the whole arc of its history. With his eagerness, he seemed in many ways so young. But yet he brought to his judgment about Mathematica a certain seasoned wisdom.

Over the years, I worked on many projects with Robby Villegas. From all sorts of detailed pieces of Mathematica design, to the emergency need to produce Mathematica code for notation for numbers and polynomials from antiquity (code that lives on for example in Wolfram|Alpha).

In later years, there were times when it could take a while to hear from Robby Villegas. But always the responses were careful, clear, and creative. And profoundly committed to making sure that the Mathematica language that we have all created remained as elegant and unified as possible.

There are countless specific functions in Mathematica that owe their structure and syntax to Robby Villegas. And as the system grows, these functions become the cornerstones of yet more development—building on the legacy of Robby Villegas.

Every day, around the world, people use those functions that Robby Villegas designed. And though all will benefit from it, few will pause to admire the elegance of the design. Or know about the wonderful human being who put so much effort into creating and ensuring that elegance: Robby Villegas, a great scholar and guardian of the Mathematica language, and its first true design analyst.

7 Responses to “A Tribute from Stephen Wolfram”

  1. Angie Jones Says:

    I remeber Robby from middle school he was one of the nicest boys i had ever met, he was brilliant! I always had trouble in math and Robby was always there to help me out, I wouldnt even have to ask him he would gladly volunteer to help me, i had just recently found him again on facebook, he was truly one of the sweetest people i know he will be so missed….

  2. Anonymous Says:

    Hallucinations of Robby

    Logical
    Mountain Dew
    Wry
    Malcolm X
    Rash
    Ice-skating
    Unforgiving
    Yellow rain jacket
    Brutal
    Bridges of Madison County
    Maudlin
    Mandarin
    Empathetic
    Bugs
    Hermit
    Fish on Fridays
    Insomnia
    Red Corolla
    Mindful

  3. Dana McNeely Greene Says:

    Robby was one of my first friends when I began work at Wolfram. I just learned of his passing today..on his birthday & Thanksgiving. I’m very thankful for having him as a friend. God Bless.

  4. Stephanie Barkin Says:

    I met Robby on Orkut several years ago – he’s the only person I kept in touch with from that networking site. There was something so special about Robby, and I really valued his friendship. I’m going to miss hearing him call me “Stephanova.” And who is going to warn me when I about to stumble upon a photograph of a praying mantis? Rest peacefully, Robby.

  5. David Cunningham Says:

    The brain may die, but I believe one’s mind is eternal. It is our link to the consciousness of the universe, which is a living, breathing Thing. Thought energy, synchronicity, deja vu, dreams; I believe a part of Robby is still with us. Our energy goes on.

  6. Patrick McGraw Says:

    Robbie was truly fun to work with. I believe he was one of the few developers who actually never needed a Macintosh on his desk. Many others needed to see “the Mac Front End” to get things right. Robbie never did.

    His dry sense of humor, his clear observations and his sensibilities were a gift to us.

    We’ll miss you, Robbie.

    –Patrick McGraw, WRI SysAdmin, 1989 – 1997

  7. Robert Naiman Says:

    I just heard this news yesterday. Ouch. Robby was one of my favorite people at WRI – you could have a nice and engaging conversation with him about Mathematica, and you could also have a nice and engaging conversation with him about the world outside of Wolfram Research. I saw him as soft-spoken but not withdrawn – he followed politics, and when I organized a contribution from WRI employees to Christian Peacemaker Teams in memory of Jerry Keiper, he made a contribution.

    I did not really keep in touch with Robby after I left WRI, but I would see him occasionally around town and I was under the impression that he was doing ok. Needless to say, I’m doubly sorry for this news; sorry to learn of his passing, sorry to learn of his torment.

    A thoughtful, caring, and gentle soul. I will miss him.

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