On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 6:33 AM <arnold@skeeve.com> wrote:
Ed Bradford <egbegb2@gmail.com> wrote:

> I've forgotten who created stdio, USG or the research group. Can any of the
> youthful BTL folks of the 1970's refresh my mind.


It was part of V7. I think DMR gets most of the credit.
At this risk of putting too fine a point on it, the stdio library was released in the wild before V7 or UNIX/TS et al.  

To answer Ed's question, it came out of Research, but first as part of the typesetter support - i.e. 'Typesetter C', which was on V6 and PWB 1.0 [the new troff replacement was being written by Brian] .  The C Language and associated libraries in the 'Typesetter C' release maps to the compiler described in the original K&R book.  Dennis explains this in his paper:  The Development of the C Language .

"Lesk wrote a `portable I/O package' [Lesk 72] that was later reworked to become the C `standard I/O' routines. In 1978 Brian Kernighan and I published The C Programming Language [Kernighan 78]. "

I have the Lesk paper, as PDF (which I have not idea where I obtained).  I did a quick google search and could not find it for download, so if you are interested, send me an e-mail offline and I'll pass you a copy.

I've forgotten when 'enum' and 'void' got added (which are not in the white book - Steve Johnson or Doug may remember).   But, I think they were in the V7 compiler, and not Typesetter C.

Clem