His main research interests were linear programming and matrix ring.
In 1940, he obtained a degree in mathematics at the Pázmány Péter University, then in 1948 he also obtained a qualification in economics and a doctorate from the József Nádor University of Technology and Economics.
From 1954 he was an associate professor at the Department of Mathematics of the Károly Marx University of Economics.
He played a prominent and decisive role in the 1961 launch of the plan-mathematical economist program.
He is the organizer and regular speaker of the first computer science education conferences.