Call for Papers The 1999 International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP) Paris, France, September 27 - September 29, 1999 ICFP 99 is part of the colloquium on Principles, Logics, and Implementations of high-level programming languages (PLI 99). * Submission Deadline: March 10, 1999 * Notification of Acceptance or Rejection: May 8, 1999 * Final Paper Due: June 21, 1999 The fourth ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Functional Programming provides a forum for researchers, developers, teachers, and all users of functional programming languages. The conference considers all languages that encourage programming with functions, including both purely applicative and imperative languages, as well as languages that support objects and concurrency. The conference will be held in Paris on September 27-29, as part of the Colloquium on Principles, Logics, and Implementations of High-Level Programming Languages (PLI). Further information about ICFP99 can be found on the World-Wide Web at http://pauillac.inria.fr/pli/icfp/. Information about PLI is available at http://pauillac.inria.fr/pli/. ICFP99 seeks original papers on the full spectrum of the art, science, and practice of functional programming. The conference invites submissions on all topics ranging from principles to practice, from experiments to design, and from theory to application. Papers setting new directions in functional programming are particularly encouraged. Topics of interest include: * Foundations: formal semantics; type theory; lambda calculus; monads and continuations; state, effects, and control. * Language Design: novel languages or features; modules and type systems; multiparadigm programming. * Implementation: abstract machines; optimizations; run-time systems and memory management. * Systems, Applications and Experience: parallel and distributed computing; systems programming; multimedia programming; symbolic and scientific computing; FP in education and industry; ramifications on other paradigms and computing disciplines. * Transformation and Analysis: abstract interpretation; partial evaluation; specific analyses; transformation techniques; specifications and verification. Submitted papers must describe new ideas or experimental results that have not previously been published in refereed venues. Simultaneous submissions to other conferences or refereed venues is unacceptable. Papers will be judged on relevance, originality, significance, correctness, and clarity. Each paper should explain its contributions in both general and technical terms, clearly identifying what has been accomplished, saying why it is significant, and comparing it with previous work. Authors should try to make the technical content of their papers understandable to a broad audience. Prospective authors should submit a 100-200 word abstract and a 5,000 word extended summary by 23:00 Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) on March 10, 1999 (this is 6pm Eastern Standard Time on March 10). The abstract must be in plain text (ASCII) format, and the summary must be in PostScript format (A4 or US letter size). Submissions that are not in the proper format will be immediately rejected. Submissions that exceed the word-count limits may be arbitrarily truncated. If you feel you must add material beyond the 5,000 word limit, you are advised to do this in the form of appendices. However, reviewers will not be obligated to read the appendices, and thus you are strongly advised to make the main part of the summary be self-contained. The deadline is a hard deadline; late submissions will not be considered. Authors are strongly encouraged to make their submissions via a web-based submission form. Submission is complete only when the electronic version of the paper has been successfully acknowledged by the submission system. If you do not have the ability to make your submission via the World-Wide Web, you may send your submission by an alternate means by first getting permission and submission instructions from the Program Chair. You are kindly requested to study the details of the submission procedure at least two weeks before the deadline and determine well ahead of time whether you require an alternate means of submission. Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection by May 8, 1999. The full version of the accepted papers must be received in camera-ready form by June 21 for inclusion in the proceedings. Authors of accepted papers will be required to sign the ACM copyright form (PostScript format). Proceedings will be published by ACM Press. General Chair: Didier Remy, INRIA (France) Program Chairman: Peter Lee, Carnegie Mellon University (USA) Program Committee: * Lennart Augustsson, Chalmers University (Sweden) * Alain Deutsch, INRIA (France) * Sophia Drossopoulou, Imperial College (UK) * Conal Elliott, Microsoft Research (USA) * Andrzej Filinski, Aarhus University (Denmark) * Kathleen Fisher, AT&T Laboratories (USA) * Jacques Garrigue, Kyoto University (Japan) * Peter Lee, Carnegie Mellon University (USA) * Rishiyur S. Nikhil, Compaq Computer Corporation (USA) * Benjamin Pierce, University of Pennsylvania (USA) * Manuel Serrano, University of Nice (France) * Peter Thiemann, University of Nottingham (UK) and University of Tuebingen (Germany) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ All requests for further information can be addressed to Peter Lee at [EMAIL PROTECTED]