[Haskell] [PEPM 2009] Preliminary CFP

German Vidal gvidal at dsic.upv.es
Wed Jul 30 05:17:38 EDT 2008


                          P R E L I M I N A R Y

                      C A L L   F O R   P A P E R S

                          === P E P M  2009 ===

                         ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on
              Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation

            http://www.clip.dia.fi.upm.es/Conferences/PEPM09

                           January 19-20, 2009
                         Savannah, Georgia, USA
                       (Affiliated with POPL 2009)


IMPORTANT DATES

           Abstract due:  October 12, 2008
             Submission:  October 17, 2008
    Author Notification: November 17, 2008
     Camera-Ready Paper: December  1, 2008

SCOPE

The   PEPM  Symposium/Workshop  series   aims  at   bringing  together
researchers  and  practitioners  working   in  the  areas  of  program
manipulation, partial evaluation, and program generation. PEPM focuses
on  techniques,  theory,  tools,  and  applications  of  analysis  and
manipulation of programs. PEPM is classified as category A in the CORE
ranking of ICT conferences.

The  2009 PEPM workshop  will be  based on  a broad  interpretation of
semantics-based   program  manipulation   and  continue   last  years'
successful effort to expand the scope of PEPM significantly beyond the
traditionally covered  areas of partial  evaluation and specialization
and include practical applications  of program transformations such as
refactoring  tools, and  practical implementation  techniques  such as
rule-based  transformation systems.   In addition,  the scope  of PEPM
covers  manipulation   and  transformations  of   program  and  system
representations such  as structural and semantic models  that occur in
the context  of model-driven  development.  In order  to reach  out to
practitioners, a  separate category of tool  demonstration papers will
be solicited.

Topics of interest for PEPM'09 include, but are not limited to:

* Program  and model manipulation  techniques such  as transformations
   driven  by   rules,  patterns,  or   analyses,  partial  evaluation,
   specialization,  program  inversion,  program composition,  slicing,
   symbolic execution, refactoring,  aspect weaving, decompilation, and
   obfuscation.

* Program  analysis techniques  that are  used to  drive program/model
   manipulation  such  as  abstract  interpretation,  static  analysis,
   binding-time  analysis, dynamic  analysis,  constraint solving,  and
   type systems.

* Analysis  and  transformation   for  programs/models  with  advanced
   features  such  as  objects,  generics,  ownership  types,  aspects,
   reflection, XML type systems, component frameworks, and middleware.

* Techniques  that  treat programs/models  as  data objects  including
   meta-programming,  generative programming,  staged  computation, and
   model-driven program generation and transformation.

* Application of the  above techniques including experimental studies,
   engineering  needed for scalability,  and benchmarking.  Examples of
   application  domains   include  legacy  program   understanding  and
   transformation, domain-specific language implementations, scientific
   computing,  middleware  frameworks  and  infrastructure  needed  for
   distributed    and    web-based    applications,    resource-limited
   computation, and security.

We  especially  encourage  papers  that  break  new  ground  including
descriptions of how program/model manipulation tools can be integrated
into realistic software  development processes, descriptions of robust
tools capable of effectively  handling realistic applications, and new
areas of application such as rapidly evolving systems, distributed and
webbased  programming including middleware  manipulation, model-driven
development, and  on-the-fly program adaptation driven  by run-time or
statistical analysis.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES, CATEGORIES, AND PROCEEDINGS

Regular Research  Papers must not  exceed 10 pages in  ACM Proceedings
style.   Tool demonstration  papers must  not  exceed 4  pages in  ACM
Proceedings style.  At least one author of  each accepted contribution
must attend  the workshop and  present the work.  In the case  of tool
demonstration papers,  a live demonstration  of the described  tool is
expected.    Suggested  topics,   evaluation  criteria,   and  writing
guidelines for  both research tool  demonstration papers will  be made
available  on  the  PEPM'09  Web-site.   Papers  should  be  submitted
electronically via  the workshop  web site.  The  workshop proceedings
will be published in the  ACM Digital Library. A journal special issue
dedicated to PEPM'09 including selected papers is under consideration.

PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS

   German Puebla, Technical University of Madrid,  Spain
   German Vidal, Technical University of Valencia, Spain

PEPM 2009 PROGRAM COMMITTEE

   To be announced



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