----------------------------------------------------------------------
Second Call For Papers
ACM SIGPLAN 2007 Workshop on
PARTIAL EVALUATION AND PROGRAM MANIPULATION (PEPM'07)
Nice, France
January 15-16, 2007
(Co-located with POPL 2007)
http://www.program-transformation.org/PEPM07
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The PEPM Symposium/Workshop series aims to bring 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.
The 2007 PEPM workshop will be based on a broad interpretation of
semantics-based program manipulation and continue last year's 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'07 include, but are not limited to:
+ Program and model manipulation techniques such as transformations
driven by rules, patterns, or analyses, partial evaluation,
specialization, 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
web-based programming including middleware manipulation, model-driven
development, and on-the-fly program adaptation driven by run-time or
statistical analysis.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Submission Categories and Guidelines
Regular research papers must not exceed 10 pages in ACM Proceedings
style. Tool demonstration papers must not exceed 4 pages in ACM
Proceedings style, and authors will be expected to present a live
demonstration of the described tool at the workshop. Suggested topics,
evaluation criteria, and writing guidelines for both research tool
demonstration papers will be made available on the PEPM'07 web
site. Papers should be submitted electronically via the workshop web
site. The workshop proceedings will be published in the ACM Digital
Library and selected papers will be invited for a journal special
issue dedicated to PEPM'07.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Important Dates
+ Abstracts due: October 18, 2006
+ Submission: October 20, 2006
+ Notification: December 1, 2006
+ Camera-ready: December 18, 2006
+ Workshop: January 15-16, 2007
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Program Chairs
* G. Ramalingam (Microsoft Research, Bangalore)
* Eelco Visser (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
Program Committee Members
* Ras Bodik (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
* Albert Cohen (INRIA, France)
* Jim Cordy (Queen's University, Canada)
* Martin Erwig (Oregon State University, USA)
* Bernd Fischer (University of Southampton, UK)
* John Hatcliff (Kansas State University, USA)
* Jan Heering (CWI, The Netherlands)
* Dan Grossman (University of Washington, USA)
* Annie Liu (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
* Jacques Noyé (École des Mines de Nantes/INRIA, France)
* German Puebla (Technical University of Madrid, Spain)
* Peter Sestoft (Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Denmark)
* Yannis Smaragdakis (Georgia Tech, Atlanta, USA)
* Walid Taha (Rice University, Houston, USA)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Hi,
the program for STS06 is available at
http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/sts06-preliminary/
The early registration deadline for GPCE/OOPSLA is September 14th (this
Thursday)!
http://www.oopsla.org/2006/registration.html
Magne
________________________________________________________________________
STS'06: Software Transformation Systems Workshop
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06
part of the
Fifth international conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'06)
http://www.program-transformation.org/GPCE06/
October 22-26, 2006, Portland, Oregon
colocated with OOPSLA'06
________________________________________________________________________
Workshop Organisers
* Magne Haveraaen, University of Bergen, Norway
http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/
* Jim Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~cordy/
* Jan Heering, CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~jan/
* Eelco Visser, Utrecht University, Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/
Submission of intent to participate / registration
--------------------------------------------------------------------
If you find this workshop interesting you should send an e-mail to
sts06(a)ii.uib.no with your intent to participate and your area of
expertise/interest. Space may be limited at the workshop, and registered
participants will be given priority.
Workshop participants should register for the GPCE'06 conference at the
OOPSLA registration web site. Those who only wish to participate in the
workshop should register for any one day of the conference. The badge
will let you attend the workshop as well as the chosen day of the
conference.
Program
-------
* 0830-1000 Specific transformation system (toolkits)
Chair: Eelco Visser
* Drew Hoskins: Background on Phoenix
* Pierre-Etienne Moreau, Antoine Reilles: Strategic
programming in Java
* Andreas I. Schmied: The AspectIX Transformation Process
Language
* Victor L. Winter, Christopher Scalzo, Arpit Jain, Brent
Kucera, Azamatbek Mametjanov: Comprehension of
Generative Techniques
* Coffee break
* 1030-1200 Impact of transformation systems
Chair: Jan Heering
The following three papers discuss different angles of the
problem of impact of transformation research in industry and the
scattering of research efforts. The papers will give rise to
plenty discussion, which hopefully will continue into lunch.
* Martin Bravenboer: Impact of Software Transformation
Systems on Language Workbenches and Domain-Specific
Language Tools
* Karl Trygve Kalleberg: Improving the Reuse of Language
Infrastructures
* Tony Sloane, Shirley Goldrei: Towards a coordinated
approach to software transformation
* Jurgen J. Vinju: UPTR: a simple parse tree
representation format
* Lunch break
* 1330-1500 Requirements on program transformation techniques
Chair: Jim Cordy
Challenges and possible solutions to improve program
transformation systems.
* Eelco Visser: Transformations for Abstractions
* Daniel J. Quinlan, Richard Vuduc: Requirements for
Domain-Specific Source-to-Source Translation
* Ewen Denney, Bernd Fischer, Johann Schumann: Using
Software Transformation Systems as Program Generator
Backends
* Chung-Horng Lung: Moving towards Architecture Driven
Software Transformation
* Coffee break
* 1530-1700 Applications of program transformation
Chair: Magne Haveraaen
* Ralf Lammel: Evolution-enabled application-programming
interfaces
* Ashley W. Brown, Wayne Luk, Paul H.J. Kelly: Generating
Hardware Designs by Source Code Transformation
* Elizabeth Dancy, Jim Cordy: Generating Software Tuning
Panels for Autonomic Control
* I. Karlin, Jean Utke: Source Transformations for
Automatic Differentiation controlled by Performance
Metrics
Each speaker is given 15 minutes for presentation and quick questions.
The remainder of the session is for discussing the topics raised by the
speakers.
AOSD 2007: FINAL CALL FOR RESEARCH PAPERS
6th Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development
http://www.aosd.net/2007/cfc/research.php
>> THREE weeks until deadline <<
Abstracts: September 22
Full papers: September 29
------------------------------------------------------
AOSD is the premier conference on software
modularity that crosscuts traditional
abstraction boundaries. AOSD brings together
researchers and practitioners working in
the fields of software engineering,
programming languages and software systems.
The program committee especially welcomes
submissions from researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
implementing aspects via transformations
1
0
aosd 2007
by Oege.de.Moor@comlab.ox.ac.uk
12 Aug '06
12 Aug '06
AOSD 2007: CALL FOR RESEARCH PAPERS
6th Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development
http://www.aosd.net/2007/cfc/research.php
>> on-line submission is now open <<
Deadline September 22
------------------------------------------------------
The program committee especially welcomes
submissions from researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
implementing aspects via transformations
Just a reminder that the deadline is this week - Magne
________________________________________________________________________
STS'06: Software Transformation Systems Workshop
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06
part of the
Fifth international conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'06)
http://www.program-transformation.org/GPCE06/
October 22-26, 2006, Portland, Oregon
colocated with OOPSLA'06
________________________________________________________________________
Workshop Organisers
* Magne Haveraaen, University of Bergen, Norway
http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/
* Jim Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~cordy/
* Jan Heering, CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~jan/
* Eelco Visser, Utrecht University, Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/
Workshop schedule:
* 2 page position paper submission deadline: July 15, 2006
* Notification of acceptance: August 31, 2006
* GPCE/OOPSLA early registration deadline: September 14, 2006
* Workshop day: Sunday October 22, 2006
Motivation
----------
Generative software techniques typically transform components or
codefragments, instantiate patterns etc. in some way or another to
generate new code fragments, components or programs. Often this needs
software support beyond that of existing compilers, i.e., some kind of
system which takes software as inputs and produces software as output.
Software transformation systems are tools which are built for such
transformations. They range from specific tools for one purpose, via
simple pattern matching systems, to general transformation systems which
are easily programmed to do any reasonable transformation. Thus the more
general tools may be treated as meta-tools for generative programming.
Following on the success of STS'04, this workshop is once again designed
to bring together people working on software transformation systems and
those with an interest in software transformation systems as a
generative tool, with the aim of investigating the use of software
transformation tools as tools to support generative programming. We want
to look at various generative techniques and suggest how these may be
supported by various general purpose transformation tools. This may lead
to a more general understanding of common principles for supporting
generative methods.
This year's workshop will particularly focus on architecture, reuse,
implementation (data representations and algorithms), application models
and benchmarks, although contributions on a wide range of topics in the
application of software transformation systems in generative techniques
are sought.
Workshop format
---------------
The workshop will have a small number of participants, around 20,
selected on the basis of short position papers submitted to the
organisers. The aim is to let people with different perspectives meet in
order to allow fruitful interaction.
Submission of intent to participate
-----------------------------------
If you find this workshop interesting you should send an e-mail to
sts06(a)ii.uib.no with your intent to participate and your area of
expertise/interest, and/or a short, max 2 page, position paper intended
as an abstract of a presentation.
We prefer plain ISO or UTF-8 documents (txt), but latex (only use
standard packages) and pdf formats are also acceptable.
--
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/MailingList
1
0
aosd 2007
by Oege.de.Moor@comlab.ox.ac.uk
20 Jun '06
20 Jun '06
AOSD 2007: CALL FOR RESEARCH PAPERS
6th Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development
http://www.aosd.net/2007/cfc/research.php
>> abstract submission by September 22, 2006 <<
------------------------------------------------------
The program committee especially welcomes
submissions from researchers on transformation systems
on any topic relating to
implementing aspects via transformations
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Call For Papers
ACM SIGPLAN 2007 Workshop on
Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation (PEPM'07)
Nice, France, January 15-16, 2007
(Co-located with POPL 2007)
http://www.program-transformation.org/PEPM07
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
The PEPM Symposium/Workshop series aims to bring 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.
The 2007 PEPM workshop will be based on a broad interpretation of
semantics-based program manipulation and continue last year's
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'07 include, but are not limited to:
* Program and model manipulation techniques such as transformations
driven by rules, patterns, or analyses, partial evaluation,
specialization, 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.
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 Categories, Guidelines, 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, and authors will be expected to present a live
demonstration of the described tool at the workshop. Suggested topics,
evaluation criteria, and writing guidelines for both research tool
demonstration papers will be made available on the PEPM'07
Web-site. Papers should be submitted electronically via the workshop
web site. We plan to publish the workshop proceedings in the ACM
Digital Library (approval pending) and selected papers will be invited
for a journal special issue dedicated to PEPM'07.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Important Dates
* Abstracts due: October 18, 2006
* Submission: October 20, 2006
* Notification: December 1, 2006
* Camera-ready: December 18, 2006
* Workshop: January 15-16, 2007
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Program Chairs:
* G. Ramalingam (IBM Research, Bangalore)
* Eelco Visser (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
Program Committee Members
* Ras Bodik (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
* Albert Cohen (INRIA, France)
* Jim Cordy (Queen's University, Canada)
* Martin Erwig (Oregon State University, USA)
* Bernd Fischer (University of Southampton, UK)
* John Hatcliff (Kansas State University, USA)
* Jan Heering (CWI, The Netherlands)
* Dan Grossman (University of Washington, USA)
* Annie Liu (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
* Jacques Noyé (École des Mines de Nantes/INRIA, France)
* German Puebla (Technical University of Madrid, Spain)
* Peter Sestoft (Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Denmark)
* Yannis Smaragdakis (Georgia Tech, Atlanta, USA)
* Walid Taha (Rice University, Houston, USA)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
STS'06: Software Transformation Systems Workshop
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06
part of the
Fifth international conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'06)
http://www.program-transformation.org/GPCE06/
October 22-26, 2006, Portland, Oregon
colocated with OOPSLA'06
________________________________________________________________________
Workshop Organisers
* Magne Haveraaen, University of Bergen, Norway
http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/
* Jim Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~cordy/
* Jan Heering, CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~jan/
* Eelco Visser, Utrecht University, Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/
Workshop schedule:
* 2 page position paper submission deadline: July 15, 2006
* Notification of acceptance: August 31, 2006
* GPCE/OOPSLA early registration deadline: September 14, 2006
* Workshop day: Sunday October 22, 2006
Motivation
----------
Generative software techniques typically transform components or
codefragments, instantiate patterns etc. in some way or another to
generate new code fragments, components or programs. Often this needs
software support beyond that of existing compilers, i.e., some kind of
system which takes software as inputs and produces software as output.
Software transformation systems are tools which are built for such
transformations. They range from specific tools for one purpose, via
simple pattern matching systems, to general transformation systems which
are easily programmed to do any reasonable transformation. Thus the more
general tools may be treated as meta-tools for generative programming.
Following on the success of STS'04, this workshop is once again designed
to bring together people working on software transformation systems and
those with an interest in software transformation systems as a
generative tool, with the aim of investigating the use of software
transformation tools as tools to support generative programming. We want
to look at various generative techniques and suggest how these may be
supported by various general purpose transformation tools. This may lead
to a more general understanding of common principles for supporting
generative methods.
This year's workshop will particularly focus on architecture, reuse,
implementation (data representations and algorithms), application models
and benchmarks, although contributions on a wide range of topics in the
application of software transformation systems in generative techniques
are sought.
Workshop format
---------------
The workshop will have a small number of participants, around 20,
selected on the basis of short position papers submitted to the
organisers. The aim is to let people with different perspectives meet in
order to allow fruitful interaction.
Submission of intent to participate
-----------------------------------
If you find this workshop interesting you should send an e-mail to
sts06(a)ii.uib.no with your intent to participate and your area of
expertise/interest, and/or a short, max 2 page, position paper intended
as an abstract of a presentation.
All material must be received by the end of June 2006. We prefer plain
ISO or UTF-8 documents (txt), but latex (only use standard packages) and
pdf formats are also acceptable.
--
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/MailingList
STS'06: Software Transformation Systems Workshop
part of the
Fifth international conference on
Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE'06)
October 22-26, 2006, Portland, Oregon
colocated with OOPSLA'06
________________________________________________________________________
Workshop Organisers
* Magne Haveraaen, University of Bergen, Norway
http://www.ii.uib.no/~magne/
* Jim Cordy, Queen's University, Canada
http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~cordy/
* Jan Heering, CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~jan/
* Eelco Visser, Utrecht University, Netherlands
http://www.cs.uu.nl/~visser/
Workshop schedule:
* 2 page position paper submission deadline: July 1, 2006
* Notification of acceptance: July/August, 2006,
in time for GPCE/OOPSLA early registration
* Workshop day: Sunday, October 22, 2006
Motivation
----------
Generative software techniques typically transform components or
codefragments, instantiate patterns etc. in some way or another to
generate new code fragments, components or programs. Often this needs
software support beyond that of existing compilers, i.e., some kind of
system which takes software as inputs and produces software as output.
Software transformation systems are tools which are built for such
transformations. They range from specific tools for one purpose, via
simple pattern matching systems, to general transformation systems which
are easily programmed to do any reasonable transformation. Thus the more
general tools may be treated as meta-tools for generative programming.
Following on the success of STS'04, this workshop is once again designed
to bring together people working on software transformation systems and
those with an interest in software transformation systems as a
generative tool, with the aim of investigating the use of software
transformation tools as tools to support generative programming. We want
to look at various generative techniques and suggest how these may be
supported by various general purpose transformation tools. This may lead
to a more general understanding of common principles for supporting
generative methods.
This year's workshop will particularly focus on architecture, reuse,
implementation (data representations and algorithms), application models
and benchmarks, although contributions on a wide range of topics in the
application of software transformation systems in generative techniques
are sought.
Workshop format
---------------
The workshop will have a small number of participants, around 20,
selected on the basis of short position papers submitted to the
organisers. The aim is to let people with different perspectives meet in
order to allow fruitful interaction.
Submission of intent to participate
-----------------------------------
If you find this workshop interesting you should send an e-mail to
sts06(a)ii.uib.no with your intent to participate and your area of
expertise/interest, and/or a short, max 2 page, position paper intended
as an abstract of a presentation.
All material must be received by the end of June 2006. We prefer plain
ISO or UTF-8 documents (txt), but latex (only use standard packages) and
pdf formats are also acceptable.
--
http://www.program-transformation.org/Sts/STS06
[Please distribute -- Apologies for multiple copies]
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
WFLP 2006 - 14th Workshop on Functional and (Constraint) Logic Programming
Facultad de Informatica - Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Madrid, Spain, November 16-17, 2006
http://gpd.sip.ucm.es/fraguas/wflp06/
General
=======
The Workshop on Functional and (Constraint) Logic Programming aims at bringing
together researchers interested in functional programming, (constraint) logic
programming, as well as their integration. It promotes the cross-fertilizing
exchange of ideas and experiences among researches and students from the
different communities interested in the foundations, applications, and
combinations of high-level, declarative programming languages and related areas.
The previous WFLP editions are: WCFLP 2005 (Tallinn, Estonia),
WFLP 2004 (Aachen, Germany), WFLP 2003 (Valencia, Spain),
WFLP 2002 (Grado, Italy), WFLP 2001 (Kiel, Germany),
WFLP 2000 (Benicassim, Spain), WFLP'99 (Grenoble, France),
WFLP'98 (Bad Honnef, Germany), WFLP'97 (Schwarzenberg, Germany),
WFLP'96 (Marburg, Germany), WFLP'95 (Schwarzenberg, Germany),
WFLP'94 (Schwarzenberg, Germany), WFLP'93 (Rattenberg, Germany),
and WFLP'92 (Karlsruhe, Germany).
Topics
======
WFLP'06 solicits papers in all areas of functional and (constraint) logic
programming, including (but not limited to):
* Language Design: modules and type systems, multi-paradigm languages,
concurrency and distribution, objects
* Foundations: formal semantics, rewriting and narrowing, non-monotonic
reasoning, dynamics, type theory
* Implementation: abstract machines, parallelism, compile-time and run-time
optimizations, interfacing with external languages
* Transformation and Analysis: abstract interpretation, specialization,
partial evaluation, program transformation, meta-programming
* Software Engineering: design patterns, specification, verification and
validation, debugging, test generation
* Integration of Paradigms: integration of declarative programming with
other
paradigms such as imperative, object-oriented, concurrent, and real-time
programming
* Applications: declarative programming in education and industry,
domain-specific languages, visual/graphical user interfaces, embedded
systems, WWW applications, knowledge representation and machine learning,
deductive databases, advanced programming environments and tools
The main focus is on new and original research results but submissions
describing innovative products, prototypes under development or interesting
experiments (e.g., benchmarks) are also encouraged.
Submission
==========
Authors are invited to submit an abstract and a list of keywords
not later than July 13, 2006,
and a complete paper (no longer than 14 pages including figures and references)
not later than July 20, 2006.
Style and formatting instructions, as well as the concrete submission procedure
via a web page will be detailed in next call for papers.
Publication
===========
A preprint of the proceedings will be available to the participants during the
workshop. It is planned to publish the proceedings as a special number of
Electronic Notes of Theoretical Computer Science (Elsevier) after the workshop,
but this must be confirmed.
Program Committee
=================
Sergio Antoy Portland State University (USA)
Rafael Caballero Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain)
Agostino Dovier Universita di Udine (Italy)
Rachid Echahed Institut IMAG (France)
Santiago Escobar Universidad Politecnica de Valencia (Spain)
Moreno Falaschi Universita di Udine (Italy)
Michael Hanus Christian-Albrechts-Universitat zu Kiel
(Germany)
Frank Huch Christian-Albrechts-Universitat zu Kiel
(Germany)
Tetsuo Ida University of Tsukuba (Japan)
Herbert Kuchen Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat Munster
(Germany)
Francisco J. Lopez-Fraguas (chair) Univ. Complutense de Madrid (Spain)
Wolfgang Lux Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat Munster
(Germany)
Mircea Marin University of Tsukuba (Japan)
Julio Mariño Universidad Politecnica de Madrid (Spain)
Juan J. Moreno-Navarro Universidad Politecnica de Madrid (Spain)
German Vidal U. Politecnica de Valencia (Spain)
Important dates
===============
Submissions of abstracts: July 13, 2006
Submissions of papers: July 20, 2006
Notification to authors: September 25, 2006
Final version: October 7, 2006
WFLP 2006: November 16-17, 2006
Invited Talks
=============
José Meseguer (Univ. Illinois at Urbana)
Title: to be announced
Contact
=======
Francisco Javier Lopez Fraguas
fraguas(a)sip.ucm.es
Prof. Titular Dep. Sistemas Informaticos y Programacion
Facultad Informatica
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Prof. Jose Garcia Santesmases s/n
28040 Madrid SPAIN
Phone: +34 91 3947630 Fax: +34 91 3947529
********************************
Francisco J. Lopez Fraguas
Dep. Sistemas Informaticos y Programacion
Fac. Informatica U. Complutense Madrid
Prof. García Santesmases s/n
28040 Madrid
Spain
Tel: +34 91 3947630
********************************