>>> abstracts - Oct 2, full papers - Oct 9 <<<
CC 2009
International Conference on Compiler Construction
March 22-29, York, United Kingdom
Invited Speaker: Vivek Sarkar (Rice University, US)
Part of ETAPS 2009
http://www.brics.dk/~mis/CC2009/
CC is a premier forum for presenting research on compilers
in the broadest possible sense, including run-time techniques,
programming tools, domain-specific languages, novel language
constructs and so on. In recent years CC has seen a healthy
increase in the number of submissions, in line with its broad
outlook; its typical acceptance rate is 20-25%. CC is part of
ETAPS, and this year it is held in York (UK), March 22-29 2009.
The program committee would particularly welcome
submissions from
researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
program transformation
Abstracts are due on October 2, and the deadline for
full paper submission is October 9.
Prospective authors are welcome to contact the program
chairs, Michael Schwartzbach (mis(a)brics.dk) and Oege de Moor
(oege(a)comlab.ox.ac.uk) with any queries they might have.
___________________________________________________________
Call for Participation - SLE 2008
1st International Conference on Software Language Engineering
http://planet-sl.org/sle2008/
Toulouse, France, September 29-30, 2008
____________________________________________________________
Co-located with 11th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Model-Driven
Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS 2008)
Highlights:
- 17 research papers and 1 tool demo, the program is listed below
- Anneke Kleppe and Mark van den Brand - keynote speakers
- Early registration is open until Sept 10, 2008
- SLE 2008 registration also includes access to all MODELS 2008
Workshops/Symposia
Conference
----------
The 1st International Conference on Software Language Engineering (SLE)
is devoted to topics related to artificial languages in software engineering.
SLE is an international research forum that aims to bring together
researchers and practitioners from both industry and academia to expand
the frontiers of software language engineering. Historically, SLE emerged
from two established workshop series: LDTA (Language Descriptions, Tools,
and Applications) which has been a satellite event at ETAPS for the last 8
years, and ATEM which has been co-located with MODELS and WCRE
for the last 5 years. These, as well as several other conferences and
workshops, have investigated various aspects of language design,
implementation, and evolution but from different perspectives. SLE's
foremost mission is to encourage and organize communication between
communities that have traditionally looked at software languages from
different, more specialized, and yet complementary perspectives. SLE
emphasizes the fundamental notion of languages as opposed to any
realization in specific "technical spaces".
Scope
-----
The term "software language" comprises all sorts of artificial languages
used in software development including general purpose programming
languages, domain-specific languages, modeling and metamodeling
languages, data models, and ontologies. We use this term in its broadest
sense. Thus, for example, modeling languages include UML and
UML-based languages, synchronous languages used in safety critical
applications, business process modeling languages, and web
application modeling languages, to name a few. Perhaps less
obviously, the term "software language" also comprises APIs and
collections of design patterns that are indeed implicitly defined languages..
Software language engineering is the application of a systematic,
disciplined, quantifiable approach to the development, use, and
maintenance of these languages. Thus, the SLE conference is
concerned with all phases of the lifecycle of software languages;
these include the design, implementation, documentation, testing,
deployment, evolution, recovery, and retirement of languages. Of
special interest are tools, techniques, methods and formalisms that
support these activities. In particular, tools are often based on or
even automatically generated from a formal description of the
language. Hence, of special interest is the treatment of language
descriptions as software artifacts, akin to programs - while paying
attention to the special status of language descriptions, subject to
tailored engineering principles and methods for modularization,
refactoring,refinement, composition, versioning, co-evolution, and analysis..
Accepted Papers
---------------
- Tiago Alves, Joost Visser, A Case Study In Grammar Engineering
- Bas Basten, Paul Klint, Language-Parametric Fact Extraction from
Source Code
- Martin Bravenboer, Eelco Visser, Parse Table Composition - Separate
Compilation and Binary Extensibility of Grammars
- Nicholas Drivalos, Dimitrios Kolovos, Richard Paige, Kiran Fernandes,
Towards a Traceability Metamodelling Language
- Mathias Fritzsche, Jendrik Johannes, Uwe Assmann, Simon Mitschke,
Wasif Gilani, Ivor Spence, John Brown, Peter Kilpatrick, Systematic
Usage of Embedded Modelling Languages in Model Transformation Chains
- Terje Gj�s�ter, Ingelin F. Isfeldt, Andreas Prinz, A language description
for Sudoku
- Thomas Goldschmidt, Towards an Incremental Update Approach for
Concrete Textual Syntaxes for UUID-Based Model Repositories
- Jurriaan Hage, Peter van Keeken, Neon: a library for language usage
analysis
- Einar H�st, Bjarte �stvold, The Java Programmer's Phrase Book
- Hongzhi Liang, Juergen Dingel, A Practical Evaluation of Using TXL
for Model Transformation
- Daniel Moody, Jos van Hillegersberg, Evaluating the Visual Syntax
of UML: Improving the Cognitive Effectiveness of the UML Family of
Diagrams
- Emma Nilsson-Nyman, Torbj�rn Ekman, Gorel Hedin, Practical
Scope Recovery using Bridge Parsing
- Jeffrey Overbey, Ralph Johnson, Generating Rewritable Abstract Syntax
Trees: A Foundation for the Rapid Development of Source Code
Transformation Tools
- Jose E. Rivera, Esther Guerra, Juan de Lara, Antonio Vallecillo,
Analyzing Rule-Based Behavioral Semantics of Visual Modeling
Languages with Maude Pablo Sanchez, Neil Loughran, Alessandro
Garcia, Lidia Fuentes, Engineering languages for specifying product-derivation
processes in Software Product Lines
- Bernhard Schaetz, Formalization and Rule-Based Transformation of
EMF Ecore- Based Models
- Pieter Van Gorp, Anne Keller, Dirk Janssens, Transformation Language
Integration based on Profiles and Higher Order Transformations
Tool Demo
- Yu Sun, Zekai Demirezen, Fr�d�ric Jouault, Robert Tairas and Jeff Gray,
A Model Engineering Approach to Tool Interoperability
The acceptance rate for SLE 2008 was 20%.
Registration
------------
Registration is open now. Early bird registration is till Sept 10.
Regitration is via http://www.irit.fr/models/registration.html
Registration to SLE also includes free access to all workshops and
symposia at MODELS 2008 for all of three days of MODELS 2008 Satellite
events.
Keynote Speakers
----------------
* "Model-driven Engineering meets Generic Language Technology," Mark
van den Brand, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands
* "Software Language Engineering: Chartin' the Map, "Anneke Kleppe,
Capgemini, The Netherlands
Organization
------------
Steering Committee
* Mark van den Brand, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands
* James Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
* Jean-Marie Favre, University of Grenoble, France
* Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University, Canada
* Gorel Hedin, Lund University, Sweden
* Ralf Laemmel, Universitat Koblenz-Landau, Germany
* Eric Van Wyk, University of Minnesota, USA
* Andreas Winter, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, Germany
General Chair
* Ralf Laemmel, Universitat Koblenz-Landau, Germany
Program Committee Co-Chairs
* Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University, Canada
* Eric Van Wyk, University of Minnesota, USA
Organization Committee
* Jean-Marie Favre, University of Grenoble, France
* Jean-Sebastien Sottet, Web Chair, University of Grenoble, France
* Andreas Winter, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, Germany
* Steffen Zschaler, Publicity Chair, TU Dresden, Germany
Program Committee
* Uwe A�mann, Technische Universitaet Dresden, Germany
* Colin Atkinson, Universit�t Mannheim, Germany
* Jean Bezivin, Uinversit� de Nantes, France
* Judith Bishop, University of Pretoria, South Africa
* Marco Brambilla, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
* Martin Bravenboer, Unversity of Oregon, USA
* Charles Consel, Uinversity of Paris VI, France
* Torbj�rn Ekman, Oxford University, England
* Gregor Engels, Universit�t Paderborn, Germany
* Robert Fuhrer, IBM, USA
* Dragan Gasevic, co-chair, Athabasca University, Canada
* Martin Gogolla, University of Bremen, Germany
* Jeff Gray, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA
* Klaus Havelund, NASA Jet Propulsion Labs, USA
* Reiko Heckel, Uinversity of Leicester, England
* Nigel Horspool, Univeristy of Victoria, Canada
* Joe Kiniry, University College Dublin, Ireland
* Paul Klint, CWI, The Netherlands
* Mitch Kokar, Northeaster Univeristy, USA
* Thomas Kuehne, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
* Julia Lawall, DIKU, Denmark
* Oege de Moor, Oxford University, England
* Pirre-Etienne Moreau, INRIA & LORIA, France
* Pierre-Alain Muller, University of Haute-Alsace, France
* Richard Paige, University of York, England
* Jeff Pan, University of Aberdeen, Scotland
* Jo�o Saraiva, Universidad do Minho, Portugal
* Micael Schwartzbach, University of Aarhus, Denmark
* Anthony Sloane, Macquarie University, Australia
* Steffen Staab, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
* Laurence Tratt, Bournemouth University, England
* Walid Taha, Rice University, USA
* Eli Tilevich, Virginia Tech, USA
* Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, MetaCase, Finland
* Eric Van Wyk, co-chair, University of Minnesota, USA
* Jurgen Vinju, CWI, The Netherlands
* Mike Whalen, Rockwell Collins, USA
* Steffen Zschaler, Technische Universitaet Dresden, Germany