PACMPL Volume 3, Issue ICFP 2019

                            Call for Papers



            accepted papers to be invited for presentation at

 The 24th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Functional Programming

                             Berlin, Germany

                       http://icfp19.sigplan.org/



### Important dates



Submissions due:    1 March 2019 (Friday) Anywhere on Earth

                    https://icfp19.hotcrp.com

Author response:    16 April (Tuesday) - 18 Apri (Friday) 14:00 UTC

Notification:       3 May (Friday)

Final copy due:     22 June (Saturday)

Conference:         18 August (Sunday) - 23 August (Friday)



### About PACMPL



Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages (PACMPL

<https://pacmpl.acm.org/>) is a Gold Open Access journal publishing

research on all aspects of programming languages, from design to

implementation and from mathematical formalisms to empirical

studies. Each issue of the journal is devoted to a particular subject

area within programming languages and will be announced through

publicized Calls for Papers, like this one.



### Scope



[PACMPL](https://pacmpl.acm.org/) issue ICFP 2019 seeks original

papers on the art and science of functional programming. Submissions

are invited on all topics from principles to practice, from

foundations to features, and from abstraction to application. The

scope includes all languages that encourage functional programming,

including both purely applicative and imperative languages, as well as

languages with objects, concurrency, or parallelism. Topics of

interest include (but are not limited to):



  * *Language Design*: concurrency, parallelism, and distribution;

     modules; components and composition; metaprogramming; type

     systems; interoperability; domain-specific languages; and

     relations to imperative, object-oriented, or logic programming.



  * *Implementation*: abstract machines; virtual machines;

     interpretation; compilation; compile-time and run-time

     optimization; garbage collection and memory management;

     multi-threading; exploiting parallel hardware; interfaces to

     foreign functions, services, components, or low-level machine

     resources.



  * *Software-Development Techniques*: algorithms and data structures;

     design patterns; specification; verification; validation; proof

     assistants; debugging; testing; tracing; profiling.



  * *Foundations*: formal semantics; lambda calculus; rewriting; type

     theory; monads; continuations; control; state; effects; program

     verification; dependent types.



  * *Analysis and Transformation*: control-flow; data-flow; abstract

     interpretation; partial evaluation; program calculation.



  * *Applications*: symbolic computing; formal-methods tools;

     artificial intelligence; systems programming; distributed-systems

     and web programming; hardware design; databases; XML processing;

     scientific and numerical computing; graphical user interfaces;

     multimedia and 3D graphics programming; scripting; system

     administration; security.



  * *Education*: teaching introductory programming; parallel

     programming; mathematical proof; algebra.



Submissions will be evaluated according to their relevance,

correctness, significance, originality, and clarity. Each submission

should explain its contributions in both general and technical terms,

clearly identifying what has been accomplished, explaining why it is

significant, and comparing it with previous work. The technical

content should be accessible to a broad audience.



PACMPL issue ICFP 2019 also welcomes submissions in two separate

categories &mdash; Functional Pearls and Experience Reports &mdash;

that must be marked as such at the time of submission and that need

not report original research results.  Detailed guidelines on both

categories are given at the end of this call.



Please contact the principal editor if you have questions or are

concerned about the appropriateness of a topic.



### Preparation of submissions



**Deadline**: The deadline for submissions is **Friday, March 1, 2019**,

Anywhere on Earth (<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anywhere_on_Earth>).

This deadline will be strictly enforced.



**Formatting**: Submissions must be in PDF format, printable in black

and white on US Letter sized paper, and interpretable by common PDF

tools. All submissions must adhere to the "ACM Small" template that is

available (in both LaTeX and Word formats) from

<https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/submissions>.  For authors

using LaTeX, a lighter-weight package, including only the essential

files, is available from

<http://sigplan.org/Resources/Author/#acmart-format>.



There is a limit of **25 pages for a full paper or Functional Pearl**

and **12 pages for an Experience Report**; in either case, the

bibliography will not be counted against these limits. Submissions

that exceed the page limits or, for other reasons, do not meet the

requirements for formatting, will be summarily rejected. Supplementary

material can and should be **separately** submitted (see below).



See also PACMPL's Information and Guidelines for Authors at

<https://pacmpl.acm.org/authors.cfm>.



**Submission**: Submissions will be accepted at <https://icfp19.hotcrp.com/>



Improved versions of a paper may be submitted at any point before the

submission deadline using the same web interface.



**Author Response Period**: Authors will have a 72-hour period,

starting at 14:00 UTC on **Tuesday, April 16, 2019**, to read reviews

and respond to them.



**Supplementary Material**: Authors have the option to attach

supplementary material to a submission, on the understanding that

reviewers may choose not to look at it. This supplementary material

should **not** be submitted as part of the main document; instead, it

should be uploaded as a **separate** PDF document or tarball.



Supplementary material should be uploaded **at submission time**, not

by providing a URL in the paper that points to an external repository.



Authors are free to upload both anonymized and non-anonymized

supplementary material. Anonymized supplementary material will be

visible to reviewers immediately; non-anonymized supplementary

material will be revealed to reviewers only after they have submitted

their review of the paper and learned the identity of the author(s).



**Authorship Policies**: All submissions are expected to comply with

the ACM Policies for Authorship that are detailed at

<https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/information-for-authors>.



**Republication Policies**: Each submission must adhere to SIGPLAN's

republication policy, as explained on the web at

<http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Republication>.



**Resubmitted Papers**: Authors who submit a revised version of a

paper that has previously been rejected by another conference have the

option to attach an annotated copy of the reviews of their previous

submission(s), explaining how they have addressed these previous

reviews in the present submission. If a reviewer identifies

him/herself as a reviewer of this previous submission and wishes to

see how his/her comments have been addressed, the principal editor

will communicate to this reviewer the annotated copy of his/her

previous review. Otherwise, no reviewer will read the annotated copies

of the previous reviews.



### Review Process



This section outlines the two-stage process with lightweight

double-blind reviewing that will be used to select papers for PACMPL

issue ICFP 2019.  We anticipate that there will be a need to clarify

and expand on this process, and we will maintain a list of frequently

asked questions and answers on the conference website to address

common concerns.



**PACMPL issue ICFP 2019 will employ a two-stage review process.** The

  first stage in the review process will assess submitted papers using

  the criteria stated above and will allow for feedback and input on

  initial reviews through the author response period mentioned

  previously. At the review meeting, a set of papers will be

  conditionally accepted and all other papers will be rejected.

  Authors will be notified of these decisions on **May 3, 2019**.



Authors of conditionally accepted papers will be provided with

committee reviews (just as in previous conferences) along with a set

of mandatory revisions. After four weeks (May 31, 2019), the authors

will provide a second submission. The second and final reviewing phase

assesses whether the mandatory revisions have been adequately

addressed by the authors and thereby determines the final

accept/reject status of the paper. The intent and expectation is that

the mandatory revisions can be addressed within four weeks and hence

that conditionally accepted papers will in general be accepted in the

second phase.



The second submission should clearly identify how the mandatory

revisions were addressed. To that end, the second submission must be

accompanied by a cover letter mapping each mandatory revision request

to specific parts of the paper. The cover letter will facilitate a

quick second review, allowing for confirmation of final acceptance

within two weeks. Conversely, the absence of a cover letter will be

grounds for the paper’s rejection.



**PACMPL issue ICFP 2019 will employ a lightweight double-blind

  reviewing process.** To facilitate this, submitted papers must

  adhere to two rules:



  1. **author names and institutions must be omitted**, and

  2. **references to authors' own related work should be in the third

  person** (e.g., not "We build on our previous work ..." but rather

  "We build on the work of ...").



The purpose of this process is to help the reviewers come to an

initial judgement about the paper without bias, not to make it

impossible for them to discover the authors if they were to

try. Nothing should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the

submission or makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult

(e.g., important background references should not be omitted or

anonymized). In addition, authors should feel free to disseminate

their ideas or draft versions of their paper as they normally

would. For instance, authors may post drafts of their papers on the

web or give talks on their research ideas.



### Information for Authors of Accepted Papers



* As a condition of acceptance, final versions of all papers must

  adhere to the new ACM Small format. The page limit for the final

  versions of papers will be increased by two pages to help authors

  respond to reviewer comments and mandatory revisions: **27 pages

  plus bibliography for a regular paper or Functional Pearl, 14 pages

  plus bibliography for an Experience Report**.



* Authors of accepted submissions will be required to agree to one of

  the three ACM licensing options: open access on payment of a fee

  (**recommended**, and SIGPLAN can cover the cost as described next);

  copyright transfer to ACM; or retaining copyright but granting ACM

  exclusive publication rights.  Further information about ACM author

  rights is available from <http://authors.acm.org>.



* PACMPL is a Gold Open Access journal. It will be archived in ACM’s

  Digital Library, but no membership or fee is required for

  access. Gold Open Access has been made possible by generous funding

  through ACM SIGPLAN, which will cover all open access costs in the

  event authors cannot. Authors who can cover the costs may do so by

  paying an Article Processing Charge (APC). PACMPL, SIGPLAN, and ACM

  Headquarters are committed to exploring routes to making Gold Open

  Access publication both affordable and sustainable.



* ACM offers authors a range of copyright options, one of which is

  Creative Commons CC-BY publication; this is the option recommended

  by the PACMPL editorial board. A reasoned argument in favour of this

  option can be found in the article [Why

  CC-BY?](https://oaspa.org/why-cc-by/) published by OASPA, the Open

  Access Scholarly Publishers Association.



* We intend that the papers will be freely available for download from

  the ACM Digital Library in perpetuity via the OpenTOC mechanism.



* ACM Author-Izer is a unique service that enables ACM authors to

  generate and post links on either their home page or institutional

  repository for visitors to download the definitive version of their

  articles from the ACM Digital Library at no charge. Downloads

  through Author-Izer links are captured in official ACM statistics,

  improving the accuracy of usage and impact

  measurements. Consistently linking to the definitive version of an

  ACM article should reduce user confusion over article

  versioning. After an article has been published and assigned to the

  appropriate ACM Author Profile pages, authors should visit

  <http://www.acm.org/publications/acm-author-izer-service> to learn

  how to create links for free downloads from the ACM DL.



* At least one author of each accepted submissions will be expected to

  attend and present their paper at the conference.  The schedule for

  presentations will be determined and shared with authors after the

  full program has been selected.  Presentations will be videotaped

  and released online if the presenter consents.



* The official publication date is the date the papers are made

  available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to *two

  weeks prior* to the first day of the conference. The official

  publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related

  to published work.



### Artifact Evaluation



Authors of papers that are conditionally accepted in the first phase

of the review process will be encouraged (but not required) to submit

supporting materials for Artifact Evaluation. These items will then be

reviewed by an Artifact Evaluation Committee, separate from the paper

Review Committee, whose task is to assess how the artifacts support

the work described in the associated paper. Papers that go through the

Artifact Evaluation process successfully will receive a seal of

approval printed on the papers themselves. Authors of accepted papers

will be encouraged to make the supporting materials publicly available

upon publication of the papers, for example, by including them as

"source materials" in the ACM Digital Library.  An additional seal

will mark papers whose artifacts are made available, as outlined in

the ACM guidelines for artifact badging.



Participation in Artifact Evaluation is voluntary and will not

influence the final decision regarding paper acceptance.



### Special categories of papers



In addition to research papers, PACMPL issue ICFP solicits two kinds

of papers that do not require original research contributions:

Functional Pearls, which are full papers, and Experience Reports,

which are limited to half the length of a full paper. Authors

submitting such papers should consider the following guidelines.



#### Functional Pearls



A Functional Pearl is an elegant essay about something related to

functional programming. Examples include, but are not limited to:



  * a new and thought-provoking way of looking at an old idea



  * an instructive example of program calculation or proof



  * a nifty presentation of an old or new data structure



  * an interesting application of functional programming techniques



  * a novel use or exposition of functional programming in the classroom



While pearls often demonstrate an idea through the development of a

short program, there is no requirement or expectation that they do

so. Thus, they encompass the notions of theoretical and educational

pearls.



Functional Pearls are valued as highly and judged as rigorously as

ordinary papers, but using somewhat different criteria. In particular,

a pearl is not required to report original research, but, it should be

concise, instructive, and entertaining. A pearl is likely to be

rejected if its readers get bored, if the material gets too

complicated, if too much specialized knowledge is needed, or if the

writing is inelegant. The key to writing a good pearl is polishing.



A submission that is intended to be treated as a pearl must be marked

as such on the submission web page, and should contain the words

"Functional Pearl" somewhere in its title or subtitle. These steps

will alert reviewers to use the appropriate evaluation

criteria. Pearls will be combined with ordinary papers, however, for

the purpose of computing the conference's acceptance rate.



#### Experience Reports



The purpose of an Experience Report is to help create a body of

published, refereed, citable evidence that functional programming

really works &mdash; or to describe what obstacles prevent it from

working.



Possible topics for an Experience Report include, but are not limited to:



  * insights gained from real-world projects using functional programming



  * comparison of functional programming with conventional programming

    in the context of an industrial project or a university curriculum



  * project-management, business, or legal issues encountered when

    using functional programming in a real-world project



  * curricular issues encountered when using functional programming in education



  * real-world constraints that created special challenges for an

    implementation of a functional language or for functional

    programming in general



An Experience Report is distinguished from a normal PACMPL issue ICFP

paper by its title, by its length, and by the criteria used to

evaluate it.



  * Both in the papers and in any citations, the title of each

    accepted Experience Report must end with the words "(Experience

    Report)" in parentheses. The acceptance rate for Experience

    Reports will be computed and reported separately from the rate for

    ordinary papers.



  * Experience Report submissions can be at most 12 pages long,

    excluding bibliography.



  * Each accepted Experience Report will be presented at the

    conference, but depending on the number of Experience Reports and

    regular papers accepted, authors of Experience reports may be

    asked to give shorter talks.



  * Because the purpose of Experience Reports is to enable our

    community to accumulate a body of evidence about the efficacy of

    functional programming, an acceptable Experience Report need not

    add to the body of knowledge of the functional-programming

    community by presenting novel results or conclusions. It is

    sufficient if the Report states a clear thesis and provides

    supporting evidence. The thesis must be relevant to ICFP, but it

    need not be novel.



The review committee will accept or reject Experience Reports based on

whether they judge the evidence to be convincing. Anecdotal evidence

will be acceptable provided it is well argued and the author explains

what efforts were made to gather as much evidence as

possible. Typically, more convincing evidence is obtained from papers

which show how functional programming was used than from papers which

only say that functional programming was used. The most convincing

evidence often includes comparisons of situations before and after the

introduction or discontinuation of functional programming. Evidence

drawn from a single person's experience may be sufficient, but more

weight will be given to evidence drawn from the experience of groups

of people.



An Experience Report should be short and to the point: it should make

a claim about how well functional programming worked on a particular

project and why, and produce evidence to substantiate this claim. If

functional programming worked in this case in the same ways it has

worked for others, the paper need only summarize the results &mdash;

the main part of the paper should discuss how well it worked and in

what context. Most readers will not want to know all the details of

the project and its implementation, but the paper should characterize

the project and its context well enough so that readers can judge to

what degree this experience is relevant to their own projects. The

paper should take care to highlight any unusual aspects of the

project. Specifics about the project are more valuable than

generalities about functional programming; for example, it is more

valuable to say that the team delivered its software a month ahead of

schedule than it is to say that functional programming made the team

more productive.



If the paper not only describes experience but also presents new

technical results, or if the experience refutes cherished beliefs of

the functional-programming community, it may be better to submit it as

a full paper, which will be judged by the usual criteria of novelty,

originality, and relevance. The principal editor will be happy to

advise on any concerns about which category to submit to.







### ICFP Organizers



General Chair: Derek Dreyer (MPI-SWS, Germany)



Artifact Evaluation Co-Chairs: Simon Marlow (Facebook, UK)

Industrial Relations Chair: Alan Jeffrey (Mozilla Research, USA)

Programming Contest Organiser: Ilya Sergey (Yale-NUS College, Singapore)

Publicity and Web Chair: Sam Tobin-Hochstadt (Indiana University, USA)

Student Research Competition Chair: William J. Bowman (University of British 
Columbia, Canada)

Workshops Co-Chair: Christophe Scholliers (Universiteit Gent, Belgium)

                    Jennifer Hackett (University of Nottingham, UK)

Conference Manager: Annabel Satin (P.C.K.)                    





### PACMPL Volume 3, Issue ICFP 2019



Principal Editor: François Pottier (Inria, France)



Review Committee:



Lennart Beringer (Princeton University, United States)

Joachim Breitner (DFINITY Foundation, Germany)

Laura M. Castro (University of A Coruña, Spain)

Ezgi Çiçek (Facebook London, United Kingdom)

Pierre-Evariste Dagand (LIP6/CNRS, France)

Christos Dimoulas (Northwestern University, United States)

Jacques-Henri Jourdan (CNRS, LRI, Université Paris-Sud, France)

Andrew Kennedy (Facebook London, United Kingdom)

Daan Leijen (Microsoft Research, United States)

Kazutaka Matsuda (Tohoku University, Japan)

Bruno C. d. S. Oliveira (University of Hong Kong, China)

Klaus Ostermann (University of Tübingen, Germany)

Jennifer Paykin (Galois, United States)

Frank Pfenning (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)

Mike Rainey (Indiana University, USA)

Chung-chieh Shan (Indiana University, USA)

Sam Staton (University of Oxford, UK)

Pierre-Yves Strub (Ecole Polytechnique, France)

German Vidal (Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain)



External Review Committee:



Michael D. Adams  (University of Utah, USA)

Robert Atkey  (University of Strathclyde, IK)

Sheng Chen  (University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA)

James Cheney  (University of Edinburgh, UK)

Adam Chlipala  (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)

Evelyne Contejean (LRI, Université Paris-Sud, France) 

Germán Andrés Delbianco  (IRIF, Université Paris Diderot, France)

Dominique Devriese  (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)

Richard A. Eisenberg  (Bryn Mawr College, USA)

Conal Elliott  (Target, USA)

Sebastian Erdweg  (Delft University of Technology, Netherlands)

Michael Greenberg  (Pomona College, USA)

Adrien Guatto  (IRIF, Université Paris Diderot, France)

Jennifer Hackett  (University of Nottingham, UK)

Troels Henriksen  (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

Chung-Kil Hur  (Seoul National University, Republic of Korea)

Roberto Ierusalimschy  (PUC-Rio, Brazil)

Ranjit Jhala  (University of California, San Diego, USA)

Ralf Jung  (MPI-SWS, Germany)

Ohad Kammar  (University of Oxford, UK)

Oleg Kiselyov (Tohoku University, Japan)

Hsiang-Shang ‘Josh’ Ko  (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)

Ondřej Lhoták  (University of Waterloo, Canada)

Dan Licata  (Wesleyan University, USA)

Geoffrey Mainland  (Drexel University, USA)

Simon Marlow  (Facebook, UK)

Akimasa Morihata  (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Shin-Cheng Mu  (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)

Guillaume Munch-Maccagnoni  (Inria, France)

Kim Nguyễn  (University of Paris-Sud, France)

Ulf Norell  (Gothenburg University, Sweden)

Atsushi Ohori  (Tohoku University, Japan)

Rex Page  (University of Oklahoma, USA)

Zoe Paraskevopoulou  (Princeton University, USA)

Nadia Polikarpova  (University of California, San Diego, USA)

Jonathan Protzenko  (Microsoft Research, USA)

Tiark Rompf  (Purdue University, USA)

Andreas Rossberg  (Dfinity, Germany)

KC Sivaramakrishnan  (University of Cambridge, UI)

Nicholas Smallbone  (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)

Matthieu Sozeau  (Inria, France)

Sandro Stucki  (Chalmers | University of Gothenburg, Sweden)

Don Syme  (Microsoft, UK)

Zachary Tatlock  (University of Washington, USA)

Sam Tobin-Hochstadt  (Indiana University, USA)

Takeshi Tsukada  (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Tarmo Uustalu  (Reykjavik University, Iceland)

Benoit Valiron  (LRI, CentraleSupelec, Univ. Paris Saclay, France)

Daniel Winograd-Cort  (University of Pennsylvania, USA)

Nicolas Wu  (University of Bristol, UK)

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