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Quine (computing)
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==History== [[John von Neumann]] theorized about [[Von Neumann universal constructor|self-reproducing automata]] in the 1940s. Later, Paul Bratley and Jean Millo's article "Computer Recreations: Self-Reproducing Automata" discussed them in 1972.<ref name="Bratley_Millo">{{cite journal | last1 = Bratley | first1 = Paul | author-link1 = Paul Bratley | last2 = Millo | first2 = Jean | title = Computer Recreations: Self-Reproducing Automata | journal = Software: Practice and Experience | volume = 2 | issue = 4 | year = 1972 | pages = 397β400 | doi=10.1002/spe.4380020411 | s2cid = 222194376 }}</ref> Bratley first became interested in self-reproducing programs after seeing the first known such program written in [[Atlas Autocode]] at Edinburgh in the 1960s by the [[University of Edinburgh]] lecturer and researcher [[Hamish Dewar]]. The "download source" requirement of the [[GNU Affero General Public License]] is based on the idea of a quine.<ref name="Stet_and_AGPLV3">{{cite web | url = http://www.softwarefreedom.org/technology/blog/2007/nov/21/stet-and-agplv3/ | title = stet and AGPLv3 | access-date = June 14, 2008 | last = Kuhn | first = Bradley M. | author-link = Bradley M. Kuhn | date = November 21, 2007 | publisher = Software Freedom Law Center | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080315231323/http://www.softwarefreedom.org/technology/blog/2007/nov/21/stet-and-agplv3/ | archive-date = March 15, 2008 | url-status = dead }}</ref>
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