[TYPES/announce] Third call for draft papers for IFL 2020 (Implementation and Application of Functional Languages)

2020-08-12 Thread Jurriaan Hage
[ The Types Forum (announcements only),
 http://lists.seas.upenn.edu/mailman/listinfo/types-announce ]

Hello,

Please, find below the third call for draft papers for IFL 2020.
Please forward these to anyone you think may be interested.
Apologies for any duplicates you may receive.

best regards,
Jurriaan Hage
Publicity Chair of IFL



IFL 2020

32nd Symposium on Implementation and Application of Functional Languages


  venue: online
 2nd - 4th September 2020

 https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/events/2020/ifl20/



### Scope

The goal of the IFL symposia is to bring together researchers actively
engaged
in the implementation and application of functional and function-based
programming languages. IFL 2020 will be a venue for researchers to present
and
discuss new ideas and concepts, work in progress, and publication-ripe
results
related to the implementation and application of functional languages and
function-based programming.

Topics of interest to IFL include, but are not limited to:

- language concepts
- type systems, type checking, type inferencing
- compilation techniques
- staged compilation
- run-time function specialisation
- run-time code generation
- partial evaluation
- (abstract) interpretation
- meta-programming
- generic programming
- automatic program generation
- array processing
- concurrent/parallel programming
- concurrent/parallel program execution
- embedded systems
- web applications
- (embedded) domain specific languages
- security
- novel memory management techniques
- run-time profiling performance measurements
- debugging and tracing
- virtual/abstract machine architectures
- validation, verification of functional programs
- tools and programming techniques
- (industrial) applications


### Post-symposium peer-review

Following IFL tradition, IFL 2020 will use a post-symposium review process
to
produce the formal proceedings.

Before the symposium authors submit draft papers. These draft papers will
be
screened by the program chair to make sure that they are within the scope
of
IFL. The draft papers will be made available to all participants at the
symposium. Each draft paper is presented by one of the authors at the
symposium.

After the symposium every presenter is invited to submit a full paper,
incorporating feedback from discussions at the symposium. Work submitted to
IFL
may not be simultaneously submitted to other venues; submissions must
adhere to ACM SIGPLAN's republication policy. The program committee will
evaluate these submissions according to their correctness, novelty,
originality, relevance, significance, and clarity, and will thereby
determine whether the
paper is accepted or rejected for the formal proceedings. We plan to
publish
these proceedings in the International Conference Proceedings Series of the
ACM Digital Library, as in previous years.


### Important dates

Submission deadline of draft papers:   17 August 2020
Notification of acceptance for presentation:   19 August 2020
Registration deadline: 31 August 2020
IFL Symposium: 2-4 September 2020
Submission of papers for proceedings:  7 December 2020
Notification of acceptance:3 February 2021
Camera-ready version:  15 March 2021


### Submission details

All contributions must be written in English. Papers must use the ACM two
columns conference format, which can be found at:

  http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template


### Peter Landin Prize

The Peter Landin Prize is awarded to the best paper presented at the
symposium every year. The honoured article is selected by the program
committee
based on the submissions received for the formal review process. The prize
carries a cash award equivalent to 150 Euros.


### Programme committee

Kenichi Asai, Ochanomizu University, Japan
Olaf Chitil, University of Kent, United Kingdom (chair)
Martin Erwig, Oregon State University,United States
Daniel Horpacsi, Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary
Zhenjiang Hu, Peking University, China
Hans-Wolfgang Loidl, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
Neil Mitchell, Facebook, UK
Marco T. Morazan, Seton Hall University, United States
Rinus Plasmeijer, Radboud University, Netherlands
Colin Runciman, University of York, United Kingdom
Mary Sheeran, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Josep Silva, Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
Jurrien Stutterheim, Standard Chartered, Singapore
Josef Svenningsson, Facebook, UK
Peter Thiemann, University of Freiburg, Germany
Kanae Tsushima, National Institute of Informatics, Japan.
Marcos Viera, Universidad de la Republica, Montevideo, Uruguay
Janis Voigtlander, 

[TYPES/announce] PEPM 2021 - First Call for Papers

2020-08-12 Thread Sam Lindley

[ The Types Forum (announcements only),
http://lists.seas.upenn.edu/mailman/listinfo/types-announce ]

   -- CALL FOR PAPERS --

ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on PARTIAL EVALUATION AND PROGRAM MANIPULATION (PEPM) 2021
===

  * Website : https://popl21.sigplan.org/home/pepm-2021
  * Time: 18th--19th January 2021
  * Place   : Online or Copenhagen, Denmark (co-located with POPL 2021)

  **Note that the workshop will be held as a physical, virtual, or
  hybrid physical/virtual meeting in line with POPL 2021. Details to
  appear.**

The ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Partial Evaluation and Program
Manipulation (PEPM), which has a history going back to 1991 and has
co-located with POPL every year since 2006, originates in the
discoveries of practically useful automated techniques for evaluating
programs with only partial input. Over the years, the scope of PEPM
has expanded to include a variety of research areas centred around the
theme of semantics-based program manipulation — the systematic
exploitation of treating programs not only as subject to black-box
execution, but also as data structures that can be generated,
analysed, and transformed while establishing or maintaining important
semantic properties.

Scope
-

In addition to the traditional PEPM topics (see below), PEPM 2021
welcomes submissions in new domains, in particular:

  * Semantics based and machine-learning based program synthesis and
program optimisation.

  * Modelling, analysis, and transformation techniques for distributed
and concurrent protocols and programs, such as session types,
linear types, and contract specifications.

More generally, topics of interest for PEPM 2021 include, but are not
limited to:

  * Program and model manipulation techniques such as:
supercompilation, partial evaluation, fusion, on-the-fly program
adaptation, active libraries, program inversion, slicing, symbolic
execution, refactoring, decompilation, and obfuscation.

  * Techniques that treat programs/models as data objects including
metaprogramming, generative programming, embedded domain-specific
languages, program synthesis by sketching and inductive
programming, staged computation, and model-driven program
generation and transformation.

  * Program analysis techniques that are used to drive program/model
manipulation such as: abstract interpretation, termination
checking, binding-time analysis, constraint solving, type systems,
automated testing and test case generation.

  * Application of the above techniques including case studies of
program manipulation in real-world (industrial, open-source)
projects and software development processes, descriptions of
robust tools capable of effectively handling realistic
applications, benchmarking. Examples of application domains
include legacy program understanding and transformation, DSL
implementations, visual languages and end-user programming,
scientific computing, middleware frameworks and infrastructure
needed for distributed and web-based applications, embedded and
resource-limited computation, and security.

This list of categories is not exhaustive, and we encourage
submissions describing new theories and applications related to
semantics-based program manipulation in general. If you have a
question as to whether a potential submission is within the scope of
the workshop, please contact the programme co-chairs, Sam Lindley
 and Torben Mogensen .

Submission categories and guidelines


Two kinds of submissions will be accepted:

  * Regular Research Papers should describe new results, and will be
judged on originality, correctness, significance, and clarity.
Regular research papers must not exceed 12 pages.

  * Short Papers may include tool demonstrations and presentations of
exciting if not fully polished research, and of interesting
academic, industrial, and open-source applications that are new or
unfamiliar. Short papers must not exceed 6 pages.

References and appendices are not included in page limits. Appendices
may not be read by reviewers. Both kinds of submissions should be
typeset using the two-column ‘sigplan’ sub-format of the new ‘acmart’
format available at:

  http://sigplan.org/Resources/Author/

and submitted electronically via HotCRP:

  https://pepm21.hotcrp.com/

Reviewing will be single-blind.

Submissions are welcome from PC members (except the two co-chairs).

Accepted papers will appear in formal proceedings published by ACM,
and be included in the ACM Digital Library. Authors of short papers,
however, can ask for their papers to be left out of the formal
proceedings, in which case they will not be treated as formal
publications and may be revised and published elsewhere.

At least one author of each accepted contribution must attend the