The program committee of the LIVE 2016 Workshop of the ECOOP (European 
Conference on Object-Oriented Programming) invites you to submit papers in 
the field of live programming environments for consideration for its 2016 
meeting in Rome (http://2016.ecoop.org/track/LIVE-2016#Call-for-Papers).

*Call for Papers*

LIVE 2016 aims to bring together people who are interested in live 
programming. Live programming systems abandon the traditional 
edit-compile-run cycle in favor of fluid user experiences that encourages 
powerful new ways of “thinking to code” and enables programmers to see and 
understand their program executions. Programming today requires much mental 
effort with broken stuttering feedback loops: programmers carefully plan 
their abstractions, simulating program execution in their heads; the 
computer is merely a receptacle for the resulting code with a means of 
executing that code. Live programming aims to create a tighter more fluid 
feedback loop between the programmer and computer, allowing the computer to 
augment more of the programming process by, for example, allowing 
programmers to progressively mine abstractions from concrete examples and 
providing continuous feedback about how their code will execute. Meanwhile, 
under the radar of the PL community at-large, a nascent community has 
formed around the related idea of “live coding”—live audiovisual 
performances which use computers and algorithms as instruments and include 
live audiences in their programming experiences.

We encourage short research papers, position papers, web essays, tool 
demonstrations (as videos), and performance proposals in areas such as:

   -     Recent work in REPLs, language environments , code playgrounds, 
   and interactive notebooks.
   -     Live visual programming.
   -     Programming by example.
   -     Programming tools for creative experiences and interactive audio 
   visual performances.
   -     Live programming as a learning aid.
   -     Fluid debugging experiences
   -     Language design in support of the above.

Submissions with go through EasyChair. Papers and essays must be written in 
English and provided as PDF documents. Papers should be less than 10 pages 
long, videos should less than 10 minutes long; other non-paper submissions 
should consume no more than 30 minutes of a casual reader’s time. Video and 
non-paper submissions can by listed as URLs (e.g. to a web page, file 
locker, or streaming site) in the submission’s abstract. At the author’s 
discretion, workshop articles can be published using an institutional ISBN 
with full support for open access.

Any questions or trouble with submitting, please contact 
[email protected].

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