[racket-users] Deadline extension may 15: Trends in Functional Programming, 19-21 june 2017, University of Kent, Canterbury

2017-05-08 Thread p.achten
TFP 2017 EXTENSION: Deadline extension until Monday, 15 May (anywhere on earth).


We encourage anyone who wants to present their work at TFP in Canterbury, 
England this June to submit a 2-10 page abstract if time is too short to put 
together a full paper.



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  F I N A L   C A L L   F O R   P A P E R S
-

 TFP 2017 ===

  18th Symposium on Trends in Functional Programming
   19-21 June, 2017
 University of Kent, Canterbury
   https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/events/tfp17/index.html

The symposium on Trends in Functional Programming (TFP) is an
international forum for researchers with interests in all aspects of
functional programming, taking a broad view of current and future
trends in the area. It aspires to be a lively environment for
presenting the latest research results, and other contributions (see
below). Authors of draft papers will be invited to submit revised
papers based on the feedback receive at the symposium.  A
post-symposium refereeing process will then select a subset of these
articles for formal publication.

TFP 2017 will be the main event of a pair of functional programming
events. TFP 2017 will be accompanied by the International Workshop on
Trends in Functional Programming in Education (TFPIE), which will take
place on 22 June.

The TFP symposium is the heir of the successful series of Scottish
Functional Programming Workshops. Previous TFP symposia were held in
   * Edinburgh (Scotland) in 2003;
   * Munich (Germany) in 2004;
   * Tallinn (Estonia) in 2005;
   * Nottingham (UK) in 2006;
   * New York (USA) in 2007;
   * Nijmegen (The Netherlands) in 2008;
   * Komarno (Slovakia) in 2009;
   * Oklahoma (USA) in 2010;
   * Madrid (Spain) in 2011;
   * St. Andrews (UK) in 2012;
   * Provo (Utah, USA) in 2013;
   * Soesterberg (The Netherlands) in 2014;
   * Inria Sophia-Antipolis (France) in 2015;
   * and Maryland (USA) in 2016.
For further general information about TFP please see the TFP homepage.
(http://www.tifp.org/).


== SCOPE ==

The symposium recognizes that new trends may arise through various
routes.  As part of the Symposium's focus on trends we therefore
identify the following five article categories. High-quality articles
are solicited in any of these categories:

Research Articles: leading-edge, previously unpublished research work
Position Articles: on what new trends should or should not be
Project Articles: descriptions of recently started new projects
Evaluation Articles: what lessons can be drawn from a finished project
Overview Articles: summarizing work with respect to a trendy subject

Articles must be original and not simultaneously submitted for
publication to any other forum. They may consider any aspect of
functional programming: theoretical, implementation-oriented, or
experience-oriented.  Applications of functional programming
techniques to other languages are also within the scope of the
symposium.

Topics suitable for the symposium include, but are not limited to:

 Functional programming and multicore/manycore computing
 Functional programming in the cloud
 High performance functional computing
 Extra-functional (behavioural) properties of functional programs
 Dependently typed functional programming
 Validation and verification of functional programs
 Debugging and profiling for functional languages
 Functional programming in different application areas:
   security, mobility, telecommunications applications, embedded
   systems, global computing, grids, etc.
 Interoperability with imperative programming languages
 Novel memory management techniques
 Program analysis and transformation techniques
 Empirical performance studies
 Abstract/virtual machines and compilers for functional languages
 (Embedded) domain specific languages
 New implementation strategies
 Any new emerging trend in the functional programming area

If you are in doubt on whether your article is within the scope of
TFP, please contact the TFP 2017 program chairs, Scott Owens and Meng Wang.


== BEST PAPER AWARDS ==

To reward excellent contributions, TFP awards a prize for the best paper
accepted for the formal proceedings.

TFP traditionally pays special attention to research students,
acknowledging that students are almost by definition part of new
subject trends. A student paper is one for which the authors state
that the paper is mainly the work of students, the students are listed
as first authors, and a student would present the paper. A prize for
the best student paper is awarded each year.

In both cases, it is the PC of TFP that awards the prize. In case the
best paper happens to be a student paper, that 

[racket-users] 2nd CfP: SLE 2017 (10th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Software Language Engineering)

2017-05-08 Thread Andrei Chis
===

**Call for Papers**

10th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Software Language Engineering (SLE 
2017)

23-24 October 2017, Vancouver, Canada

(Co-located with SPLASH 2017)

General chair:

   Benoit Combemale, University of Rennes 1, France

Program co-chairs:

   Marjan Mernik, University of Maribor, Slovenia
   Bernhard Rumpe, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

Artifact evaluation chairs:

   Tanja Mayerhofer, TU Wien, Austria
   Laurence Tratt, King's College London, UK


Keynote Speaker: 

Peter D. Mosses, Swansea University, UK (http://cs.swan.ac.uk/~cspdm/)


http://conf.researchr.org/track/sle-2017/sle-2017-papers
http://www.sleconf.org/2017
Follow us on twitter: https://twitter.com/sleconf

===

Software Language Engineering (SLE) is the application of systematic, 
disciplined, and measurable approaches to the development, use, deployment, and 
maintenance of software languages. The term "software language" is used 
broadly, and includes: general-purpose programming languages; domain-specific 
languages (e.g. BPMN, Simulink, Modelica); modeling and metamodeling languages 
(e.g. SysML and UML); data models and ontologies (e.g. XML-based and OWL-based 
languages and vocabularies).

### Important Dates

Fri 2 Jun 2017 - Abstract Submission
Fri 9 Jun 2017 - Paper Submission
Fri 4 Aug 2017 - Author Notification
Thu 10 Aug 2017 - Artifact Submission
Fri 1 Sep 2017 - Artifact Notification
Fri 8 Sep 2017 - Camera Ready Deadline
Sun 22 Oct - SLE workshops
Mon 23 Oct - Tue 24 Oct 2017 - SLE Conference

### Topics of Interest

SLE aims to be broad-minded and inclusive about relevance and scope. We solicit 
high-quality contributions in areas ranging from theoretical and conceptual 
contributions to tools, techniques, and frameworks in the domain of language 
engineering. Topics relevant to SLE cover generic aspects of software languages 
development rather than aspects of engineering a specific language. In 
particular, SLE is interested in principled engineering approaches and 
techniques in the following areas:

* Language Design and Implementation
   * Approaches and methodologies for language design 
   * Static semantics (e.g., design rules, well-formedness constraints)
   * Techniques for behavioral / executable semantics
   * Generative approaches (incl. code synthesis, compilation)
   * Meta-languages, meta-tools, language workbenches

* Language Validation
   * Verification and formal methods for languages
   * Testing techniques for languages
   * Simulation techniques for languages

* Language Integration and Composition
   * Coordination of heterogeneous languages and tools
   * Mappings between languages (incl. transformation languages)
   * Traceability between languages
   * Deployment of languages to different platforms

* Language Maintenance
   * Software language reuse
   * Language evolution 
   * Language families and variability 

* Domain-specific approaches for any aspects of SLE (design, implementation, 
validation, maintenance)

* Empirical evaluation and experience reports of language engineering tools
   * User studies evaluating usability 
   * Performance benchmarks
   * Industrial applications

### Types of Submissions

* **Research papers**: These should report a substantial research contribution 
to SLE or successful application of SLE techniques or both. Full paper 
submissions must not exceed 12 pages including bibliography in ACM SIGPLAN 
acmart conference style (http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/).

* **Tool papers**: Because of SLE's interest in tools, we seek papers that 
present software tools related to the field of SLE. Selection criteria include 
originality of the tool, its innovative aspects, and relevance to SLE. Any of 
the SLE topics of interest are appropriate areas for tool demonstrations. 
Submissions must provide a tool description of 4 pages including bibliography 
in ACM SIGPLAN acmart conference style 
(http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/), and a demonstration outline 
including screenshots of up to 6 pages. Tool demonstrations must have the 
keywords “Tool Demo” or “Tool Demonstration” in the title. The 4-page tool 
description will, if the demonstration is accepted, be published in the 
proceedings. The 6-page demonstration outline will be used by the program 
committee only for evaluating the submission.

* **Industrial papers**: These should describe real-world application scenarios 
of SLE in industry, explained in their context with an analysis of the 
challenges that were overcome and the lessons which the audience can learn from 
this experience. Industry paper submissions must not exceed 6 pages including 
bibliography in ACM SIGPLAN acmart conference style 
(http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/).

* **New ideas / vision papers**: New ideas papers should describe new,