From fluet at tti-c.org Mon Feb 2 07:43:14 2009 From: fluet at tti-c.org (Matthew Fluet) Date: Mon Feb 2 07:44:19 2009 Subject: [MLton-user] ICFP09 Call for Experience Reports Message-ID: As in the past two years, ICFP09 is soliciting 'Experience Reports' that describe how functional programming works (or fails to work) in the real world. I know that there are a few commercial/industrial users of SML/MLton, each with their own experiences to share. I'd like to encourage all such users to submit an Experience Report to ICFP. For more information on ICFP Experience Reports, see: http://web.cecs.pdx.edu/~apt/icfp09_cfer.html http://web.cecs.pdx.edu/~apt/icfp09_cfp.html From rossberg at mpi-sws.org Tue Feb 3 06:16:45 2009 From: rossberg at mpi-sws.org (Andreas Rossberg) Date: Thu Feb 5 14:49:08 2009 Subject: [MLton-user] ML 2009 Call for Papers Message-ID: <498851CD.9030501@mpi-sws.org> CALL FOR PAPERS The 2009 ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on ML To be held in conjunction with ICFP 2009 on Sunday, August 30, 2009 in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK http://www.mpi-sws.org/~rossberg/ml2009/ GOALS OF THE WORKSHOP ML is a family of programming languages that includes dialects known as Standard ML, Objective Caml, and F#. The development of these languages has inspired a large amount of computer science research, both practical and theoretical. This workshop aims to provide a forum to encourage discussion and research on ML and related technology (higher-order, typed, or strict languages). The 2009 Work shop on ML will be held in conjunction with the 14th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP 2009) in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. Previous instances were ML 2005 in Tallinn, Estonia, ML 2006 in Portland, Oregon, USA, ML 2007 in Freiburg, Germany, and ML 2008 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada). IMPORTANT DATES Submission: Monday, May 11, 2009 (earlier than in past years!) Notification: Friday, May 29, 2009 Final revision: Monday, June 15, 2009 Workshop: Sunday, August 30, 2009 SUBMISSION GUIDELINES We seek papers on topics related to ML, including, but not limited to: * applications: case studies, experience reports, pearls, etc. * extensions: higher forms of polymorphism, generic programming, objects, concurrency, distribution and mobility, semi-structured data handling, etc. * type systems: inference, effects, overloading, modules, contracts, specifications and assertions, dynamic typing, error reporting, etc. * implementation: compilers, interpreters, type checkers, partial evaluators, runtime systems, garbage collectors, etc. * environments: libraries, tools, editors, debuggers, cross-language interoperability, functional data structures, etc. * semantics: operational, denotational, program equivalence, parametricity, mechanization, etc. Submitted papers should describe new ideas, experimental results, ML-related projects, or informed positions regarding proposals for next-generation ML-style languages. In order to encourage lively discussion, submitted papers may describe work in progress. All papers will be judged on a combination of correctness, significance, novelty, clarity, and interest to the community. All paper submissions must be in English and at most 12 pages total length in the standard ACM SIGPLAN two-column conference format (9pt). Accepted papers will be published by the ACM and will appear in the ACM Digital Library. More details about the submission procedure will be announced later on the Workshop web page. PROGRAM CHAIR Andreas Rossberg (Max Planck Institute for Software Systems) PROGRAM COMMITTEE Umut Acar (Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago) Damien Doligez (INRIA Paris-Rocquencourt) Neal Glew (Intel) Andrew Gordon (Microsoft Research Cambridge) Patricia Johann (University of Strathclyde) Oleg Kiselyov (FNMOC) Neelakantan Krishnaswami (Carnegie Mellon University) David MacQueen (University of Chicago) Yasuhiko Minamide (University of Tsukuba) Norman Ramsey (Tufts University) STEERING COMMITTEE See the ML Workshop series home page at: http://www.tti-c.org/blume/ml-workshop/