[ Please accept my apologies if you receive this more than once, or if this is of no interest. ] DIKU International Summer School '98: ,------------------------------------------. | Partial Evaluation - Practice and Theory | | June 29 - July 10, 1998 | `------------------------------------------' Organizing Committee Neil D. Jones Jesper J{\o}rgensen Jens Peter Secher Morten Heine B. S{\o}rensen (chair, [EMAIL PROTECTED]) Description: ============ Program specialization, also known as partial evaluation, is an automatic tool for program optimization, similar in concept to but in several ways stronger than a highly optimizing compiler. It is a source-to-source staging transformation: a program $p$ together with partial data $s$ are transformed into an often faster specialized version $p_s$ by precomputing parts of $p$ that depend only on $s$. The possibility, in principle, of partial evaluation is contained in Kleene's classical s-m-n theorem. Specialization is worthwhile when $p$ runs for a long time, and $p_s$ is significantly faster than $p$. Suitable problem types include: Highly parameterized computations that use much time consulting parameters, but are often run using the same parameter settings; programs with many similar subcomputations; programs of a highly interpretive nature, e.g., circuit and other simulators, where specialization removes the time to scan the object being simulated; database query search algorithms; and meta-programming, where a problem is solved by designing a user-oriented language and an interpreter for it. Partial evaluators have been successfully applied to generate efficient specialized programs for ray tracing, for the Fast Fourier transform, and for circuit and planetary simulations. Partial evaluators have also been used to compile using interpreters for programming languages and to generate compilers from interpreters. The DIKU International Summer School '98 on Partial Evaluation offers a practical introduction to several existing partial evaluators, including the opportunity for guided hands-on experience, as well as the presentation of some more sophisticated theory, systems, and applications. Lectures will be given by some of the leading researchers in the field. The summer school runs for two weeks. The first week is practically oriented, focusing on a number of partial evaluation systems, mainly developed at DIKU. The second week combines practical experience with more sophisticated theory, systems, and applications. It is possible to follow each of the two weeks on its own. Lectures and Topics =================== Torben Mogensen Introduction, applications, inherited limits John Hatcliff Foundations of PE and program specialization Jens Peter Secher C-mix Jesper J{\o}rgensen Similix Lennart Augustsson PE for aircraft crew scheduling Neil Jones Lambda-mix Satnam Singh Hardware specialization Jesper J{\o}rgensen & Multi-level specialization Robert Gl{\"u}ck Morten H. B. S{\o}rensen Supercompilation John Hughes Type specialization Michael Leuschel Advanced logic program specialization Julia Lawall Specialization of an implementation of the FFT Jens Palsberg Eta-redexes Olivier Danvy Type-directed partial evaluation Peter Thiemann Aspects of the PGG system Deadline for registration ========================= May 29, 1998 http://www.diku.dk/research-groups/topps/activities/pe-sommerschool-98/