User:JaroslavTulach
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Jaroslav Tulach
My name is Jaroslav Tulach and I am the founder and initial architect of NetBeans, which is not just a well known IDE, but also the first modular desktop application framework written in Java. My name sounds Slavic and has a strange pronunciation (read the initial J as Y and last ch as in Scottish loch or in German Bach), because I am Czech. However, as NetBeans has been the flagship software product of Sun and Oracle for a while now, you don't have to worry that content of the TheAPIBook might not be widely applicable and understandable.
Maintaining NetBeans Platform, its architecture and APIs has always been the primary focus of Jaroslav. During more than fifteen years of participating in the NetBeans.org project, Jaroslav has seen, made and helped to recover from many design mistakes. Such experience obligated Jaroslav to sit down and summarize it.
Practical API Design book is available to every framework design wishing to not walk the dead-end streets and reinvent the wheel. An online addendum of API Design advices is maintained at apidesign.org.
Jaroslav likes to speak at various conferences (JavaOne, GeeCON, JUG meetings, OSGiCon, NetBeans days) and universities (Linz, Charles University) trying to popularize API design by talking about its paradoxes as well as NetBeans Platform and its advanced usage of various API design patterns.
Facts
Jaroslav Tulach
Town: Praha, Czech Republic
Phone: +420 602 684 426
email: jaroslav.tulach (at) apidesign (domain) org
work: jaroslav.tulach (at) enso (domain) org
Historical Summary
Time | Mission |
---|---|
2022- | Enso. Responsible for its JIT compiler written on top of GraalVM and making it the world's fastest & most toolable functional programming language. |
2015-2022 | OracleLabs. On a quest (for two years and counting) to make the world's fastest VM via Graal and Truffle. |
2010-2014 | NetBeans Platform architect at Oracle. Alignment with JDeveloper. Synergy between Java and JavaScript - use HTML for user interface of NetBeans. |
1999-2010 | NetBeans Platform architect at Sun Microsystems. Primary focus APIs, APIReviews, later Performance. |
1997-1999 | Founder and initial architect of NetBeans |
1995-1997 | Initial member of student team which started Xelfi which later turned into NetBeans |
1992-1998 | Master degree in computer science at MFF UK. Specialization: compilers and data structures. |
Personal Profile
NetBeans founder and initial architect who remained (after being acquired by Sun) with the project for next fifteen years. Passionate about leading teams into projects nobody thinks can succeed, overcoming all obstacles and bringing them into production:
- NetBeans IDE - first IDE for Java written in Java
- NetBeans Platform - first Swing based modular application framework
- NetBeans performance - speeding NetBeans 6.1 startup by 60%, eliminating memory leaks, improving scalability
- Netbinox - changing NetBeans architecture to support OSGi by creating the fastest OSGi framework on the planet
- JDeveloper - rebasing years of development on top of NetBeans Platform to gain startup speed and share functionality
- TwoYearsWithTruffle - bringing initial product (with a Java API) aspects to a research project
- OtherGraalAdventures - bringing GraalVM closer to production - in cloud via PGO, JNI, NetBeans
Based on success of previous projects I decided to bring Java back to browser via my Bck2Brwsr (e.g. Java virtual machine in JavaScript) project. Things seem to work quite well, but I haven't found executive sponsor to build up the necessary momentum.
Theoretical Work
Typing in terms of graphs - master thesis at MatFyz describing type system similar to what later became Generics in Java with a unique, graph based terms.
Proofs of NP-Completeness of various topics related to modularity with practical implications for anyone designing or using a module system.
Publications & Conferences
Rich Client Programming: Plugging into the NetBean Platform - contributed few philosophical chapters to book about NetBeans Platform.
Practical API Design, Apress 2008 - the first book about API Design describing all details related to API design published way sooner than the term API was kidnapped by REST and JSON guys.
20 API Paradoxes, Walrus 2012 - shorter, more strictly organized continuation/summary of Practical API Design book.
Regular speaker at JavaOne and other conferences (GeeCON, GeekOut, JDD, CurryOn) and universities.
Technical Skills
- Able to use debugger to analyze behavior of own or any foreign system
- Typing (without looking at keyboard) and thinking fast, yet concluding slowly/carefully
- Knowledge of classical languages (especially Java, but also C & etc.), functional languages (like Haskell) and logical languages (e.g. Prolog).
- Knowing how to implement any language and make it run fast
- Knowing a lot of about API Design and almost everything about API Design in Java
- Understanding general implications of modularity and how to organize a project in a distributed fashion.
Organizational Skills
- Designing process for API Reviews which allowed NetBeans to design APIs in a committee style and still keep consistency.
- Designing, advocating and implementing parallel integration which greatly improved productivity of NetBeans developer teams
- Enabling, promoting and advocating test driven development to increase quality of NetBeans code base
- Founded OracleLabs subsidiary in Prague
- Attracted skilled developers by talks at universities, conferences and meet-ups
- Helped to select and on board newcomers.
- Convinced whole experienced team to join OracleLabs and contribute to GraalVM vision
- Handed the responsibilities to professional manager when the team grew over fifteen.
Languages
- Czech - native
- English - fluent
- Russian - can read
- Polish - getting better
- German - survival level
Spare Time Activities
Skiing and showboarding and other sports. Bck2Brwsr VM. Various open source projects (mostly hosted on GitHub, but also for example contributed to Linux kernel driver).