This is probably very interesting!
Pascal
Begin forwarded message:
From: Roel Wuyts Roel.Wuyts@ulb.ac.be Date: 17 April 2005 10:51:17 GMT+02:00 To: ecoop-info@ecoop.org Subject: CFP: DLS05: ACM Dynamic Languages Symposium
CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE ACM Dynamic Languages Symposium 2005 October 18, 2005 San Diego, California (co-located with OOPSLA'05)
URL: http://decomp.ulb.ac.be:8082/events/dls05/
Abstract
In industry, static languages (such as Java, C++ and C#) are much more widely used than their dynamic counterparts (like CLOS, Python, Self, Perl, php or Smalltalk). So it appears as though dynamic language concepts were forgotten and lost the race.
But this is not the case.
Java and C#, the latest mainstream static languages, popularized to a certain extent dynamic language features such as garbage collection, portability and (limited forms of) reflection. In the near future, we expect this dynamicity to increase even further. E.g., it is getting clearer year after year that pervasive computing is becoming the rule and that concepts such as meta programming, reflection, mobility, dynamic reconfigurability and distribution are becoming increasingly popular. All of these features are the domain of dynamic languages, and hence it is only logical that more dynamic language concepts have to be taken up by static languages, or that dynamic languages can make a breakthrough.
Currently, the dynamic language community is fragmented, split over a multitude of paradigms (from functional over logic to object-oriented), languages and syntaxes. This fragmentation severely hinders research as well as acceptance, and results in either language wars or, even worse, language ignorance. The goal of this symposium is to provide a highly visible, international forum for researchers working on dynamic features and languages. We explicitly invite submissions from all kinds of paradigms (object-oriented, functional, logic, ...), as can be seen
from the structure of the program committee.
Areas of interests include, but are not limited to:
- closures
- delegation
- actors, active objects
- constraint systems
- mixins and traits
- reflection and meta-programming
- language symbiosis and multi-paradigm languages
- experience reports on successful application of dynamic languages
Accepted Papers will be published in the ACM Digital Library.
Submission Guidelines
Papers will need to be submitted using an online tracking system, of which the URL will be given later.
All papers must be submitted electronically in PDF format (or PostScript, if you do not have access to PDF-producing programs, but this is not recommended). Submissions, as well as final versions, must be formatted to conform to ACM Proceedings requirements: Nine point font on ten point baseline, two columns per page, each column 3.33 inches wide by 9 inches tall, with a column gutter of 0.33 inches, etc. See the ACM Proceedings Guidelines. You can save preparation time by using one of the templates from that page. Note that MS Word documents must be converted to PDF before being submitted.
Important Dates
- Deadline for receipt of submissions: June 24th 2005
- Notification of acceptance or rejection: August 5th 2005
- Final version for the proceedings: To be announced later
Program Committee
- Gilad Bracha
- Wolfgang De Meuter
- Stephane Ducasse
- Gopal Gupta
- Robert Hirschfeld
- Dan Ingalls
- Yukihiro Matsumoto
- Mark Miller
- Eliot Miranda
- Philippe Mougin
- Oscar Nierstrasz
- Dave Thomas
- David Ungar
- Guido Van Rossum
- Peter Van Roy
- Jon L White (G)
- Roel Wuyts (Chair)
-- Roel Wuyts DeComp roel.wuyts@ulb.ac.be Université Libre de Bruxelles http://homepages.ulb.ac.be/~rowuyts/ Belgique Vice-President of the European Smalltalk Users Group: www.esug.org
-- 2nd European Lisp and Scheme Workshop July 26 - Glasgow, Scotland - co-located with ECOOP 2005 http://lisp-ecoop05.bknr.net/