Third International Workshop on Bidirectional Transformations (BX 2014) Friday March 28th, 2014 Athens, Greece co-located with EDBT/ICDT 2014
Workshop information: http://bx-community.wikidot.com/bx2014:home Online Proceedings: http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1133/#bx Online registration is open until March 20th at http://www.edbticdt2014.gr/index.php/registration On-site registration is also available during the conference (at a higher rate). ----- Bidirectional transformations (bx) are a mechanism for maintaining the consistency of at least two related sources of information. Such sources can be relational data, software models, documents, graphs, trees, and so on. BX are an emerging topic in a wide range of research areas with prominent presence at top conferences in different fields. However, much of the research in bx tends to get limited exposure outside of a single field of study. The purpose of this workshop series is not only to further research into bx, but to promote cross-disciplinary research and awareness in the area. **************** Workshop program **************** 08:45-09:00 Opening Remarks: James Terwilliger 09:00-10:40 Session 1: Types, Transformations, and Benchmark ------------------------------------------------------------ 09:00-09:15 Implementing a Bidirectional Model Transformation Language as an Internal DSL in Scala Arif Wider 09:15-09:30 Towards a framework for multi-directional model transformations Nuno Macedo, Alcino Cunha, Hugo Pacheco 09:30-09:45 Formalizing Semantic Bidirectionalization with Dependent Types Helmut Grohne, Andres Löh, and Janis Voigtländer 09:45-10:00 Group discussion 10:00-10:15 BenchmarX Anthony Anjorin, Manuel Alcino Cunha, Holger Giese, Frank Hermann, Arend Rensink, and Andy Schürr 10:15-10:30 Towards a Repository of Bx Examples James Cheney, Jeremy Gibbons, James McKinna, and Perdita Stevens 10:30-10:40 Group discussion 10:40-11:00 Coffee Break 11:00-12:30 Session 2: Databases, Monads, and Lenses -------------------------------------------------------- 11:00-11:15 Intersection Schemas as a Dataspace Integration Technique Richard Brownlow and Alex Poulovassilis 11:15-11:30 Bidirectional Transformations in Database Evolution: A Case Study "At Scale" Mathieu Beine, Nicolas Hames, Jens Weber, and Anthony Cleve 11:30-11:40 Group discussion 11:40-11:55 Entangled State Monads Faris Abou-Saleh, James Cheney, Jeremy Gibbons, James McKinna, and Perdita Stevens 11:55-12:10 Spans of Lenses Michael Johnson and Robert Rosebrugh 12:10-12:30 Group discussion and closing _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell