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Welcome to IFL 2014

IFL 2014 will be held October 1st through 3rd at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.

Submission is now closed.

Follow @IFL_2014 on Twitter for the latest news on IFL.

Registration is now open.

The invited talk for IFL 2014 will be given by Niko Matsakis of Mozilla Research


Important Dates

  • Submission deadline for draft papers: September 8th --- NEW DEADLINE
  • Notification of acceptance for presentation: September 10
  • Early registration deadline: September 11
  • Late registration deadline: September 17
  • Submission deadline for pre-symposium proceedings: September 24
  • 26th IFL Symposium: October 1-3
  • Submission deadline for post-symposium proceedings: December 15
  • Notification of acceptance for post-symposium proceedings: January 31 2015
  • Camera-ready version for post-symposium proceedings: March 15 2015

All dates are Anywhere on Earth.

Schedule

Wednesday, Oct 1
  • 8:50 Welcome
Session: Interfacing. Chair: Peter Achten
  • 9:00 Anton Tayanovskyy, Simon Fowler, Loic Denuziere and Adam Granicz Reactive Web Applications with Embedded Dynamic Dataflow in F#
  • 9:30 Andrew Gill Blank Canvas and the remote-monad design pattern: A Foreign Function Interface to the JavaScript Canvas API
  • 10:00 Mathieu Boespflug, Facundo Dominguez, Alexander Vershilov and Allen Brown Project H: Programming R in Haskell
10:30 Break

####### Session: Language Extension. Chair: Matthew Fluet

  • 11:00 David Raymond Christiansen Type-Directed Elaboration of Quasiquotations: A High-Level Syntax for Low-Level Reflection
  • 11:30 James Gil de Lamadrid FEDELE: A Mechanism for Exending the Syntax and Semantics for the Hybrid Functional-Object-Oriented Scripting Language FOBS
  • 12:00 Tero Hasu and Matthew Flatt Source-to-Source Compilation in Racket: You Want it in Which Language?
12:30 Lunch
Session: Keynote. Chair: Sam Tobin-Hochstadt
  • 1:30 Niko Matsakis, TBA
2:30 Break
Session: Data Flow. Chair: Niko Matsakis
  • 3:30 Matthew Le and Matthew Fluet Combining Shared State with Speculative Parallelism in a Functional Language
  • 4:00 Baltasar Trancón Y Widemann and Markus Lepper Towards Execution of the Synchronous Functional Data-Flow Language Sig
  • 4:30 Philipp Schuster and Ralf Lämmel Declaration-level Change and Dependency Analysis of Hackage Packages
Thursday, Oct 2
Session: Analysis. Chair: Sven-Bodo Schulz
  • 9:00 Connor Adsit and Matthew Fluet An Efficient Type- and Control-Flow Analysis for System F
  • 9:30 Brad Torrence, Mike Stees and Andrew Gill Worker/wrapper for a Better Life
  • 10:00 Clemens Grelck and Heinrich Wiesinger Selected Issues in Persistent Asynchronous Adaptive Specialization for Generic Array Programming
10:30 Break
Session: Encoding. Chair: Clemens Grelck
  • 11:00 Connor Smith Abstract machines for higher-order term sharing
  • 11:30 Pieter Koopman, Rinus Plasmeijer and Jan Martin Jansen Church Encoding of Data Types Considered Harmful for Implementations
  • 12:00 Peter Kourzanov Bidirectional parsing: a functional/logic perspective
12:30 Lunch
Session: Types. Chair: Andrew Gill
  • 1:30 Alejandro Serrano, Patrick Bahr and Jurriaan Hage Type Families and Elaboration
  • 2:00 Arthur Azevedo de Amorim, Marco Gaboardi, Emilio Jesús Gallego Arias and Justin Hsu Really Natural Linear Indexed Type Checking
  • 2:30 Laszlo Domoszlai, Bas Lijnse and Rinus Plasmeijer Editlets: type based client side editors for iTasks
  • 3:00 Peter Achten, Jurriën Stutterheim, Laszlo Domoszlai and Rinus Plasmeijer Task Oriented Programming with Purely Compositional Interactive Vector Graphics
3:30 Depart for excursion and banquet
Friday, Oct 3
Session: Parallelism. Chair: Lars Bergstrom
  • 9:00 Jose Manuel Calderon Trilla and Colin Runciman An Iterative Compiler for Implicit Parallelism
  • 9:30 Sven-Bodo Scholz Branch and Bound in a Data Parallel Setting
  • 10:00 Markus Aronsson, Emil Axelsson and Mary Sheeran Stream Processing for Embedded Domain Specific Languages
10:30 Break
Session: Transformation. Josef Svenningsson
  • 11:00 Gershom Bazerman Flipping Fold, Reformulating Reduction
  • 11:30 Laszlo Domoszlai, Bas Lijnse and Rinus Plasmeijer Parametric lenses: change notification for bidirectional lenses
  • 12:00 Neil Sculthorpe, Andrew Farmer, and Andrew Gill Making a Century in HERMIT
12:30 Lunch
Session: Coordination. Chair: Rinus Plasmeijer
  • 1:30 Stuart Gordon and Sven-Bodo Scholz Dynamic resource adaptation for coordinating runtime systems
  • 2:00 Edward Amsden, Ryan Newton and Jeremy Siek Editing Functional Programs Without Breaking Them
  • 2:30 Olle Fredriksson, Dan Ghica and Bertram Wheen Towards a native higher-order RPC
3:00 Break
Session: Tools and Extensions. Chair: Sam Tobin-Hochstadt
  • 3:30 Thomas Schmorleiz and Ralf Lämmel Towards Tool Support for History Annotations in Similarity Management
  • 4:00 Michael Arntzenius Moxy: a language with monoidally extensible syntax
  • 4:30 Steven Keuchel and Tom Schrijvers Towards efficient implementations of effect handlers

Call For Papers

Available in Plain Text and in HTML.

Scope

The goal of the IFL symposia is to bring together researchers actively engaged in the implementation and application of functional and function-based programming languages. IFL 2014 will be a venue for researchers to present and discuss new ideas and concepts, work in progress, and publication-ripe results related to the implementation and application of functional languages and function-based programming.

Following the IFL tradition, IFL 2014 will use a post-symposium review process to produce the formal proceedings. All participants of IFL 2014 are invited to submit either a draft paper or an extended abstract describing work to be presented at the symposium. At no time may work submitted to IFL be simultaneously submitted to other venues; submissions must adhere to ACM SIGPLAN's republication policy:

http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Republication

The submissions will be screened by the program committee chair to make sure they are within the scope of IFL, and will appear in the draft proceedings distributed at the symposium. Submissions appearing in the draft proceedings are not peer-reviewed publications. Hence, publications that appear only in the draft proceedings do not count as publication for the ACM SIGPLAN republication policy. After the symposium, authors will be given the opportunity to incorporate the feedback from discussions at the symposium and will be invited to submit a revised full article for the formal review process. From the revised submissions, the program committee will select papers for the formal proceedings considering their correctness, novelty, originality, relevance, significance, and clarity.


Hotel Information

Boston provides a wide variety of hotel choices. Northeastern University is on the MBTA Green line, and easily accessible from most of Boston. A few recommended hotel choices near Northeastern:

Email the conference organizers for additional hotel recommendations.


Organizers

  • Sam Tobin-Hochstadt, Chair
Program Committee
  • Sam Tobin-Hochstadt, Indiana University
  • Rinus Plasmeijer, Radboud University Nijmegen
  • Atze Dijkstra, Utrecht University
  • Colin Runciman, University of York
  • Graham Hutton, University of Nottingham
  • Mary Sheeran, Chalmers University of Technology
  • Patricia Johann, Appalachian State University
  • Matthew Fluet, Rochester Institute of Technology
  • Josef Svenningsson, Chalmers University of Technology
  • Małgorzata Biernacka, University of Wroclaw
  • Peter Achten, Radboud Univerity Nijmegen
  • Laura Castro, University of A Coruña
  • Hai Paul Liu, Intel Labs
  • Kathryn Gray, Cambridge University
  • Lars Bergstrom, Mozilla Research
  • Lindsey Kuper, Indiana University
  • Nicolas Wu, Oxford
  • T. Stephen Strickland, Brown University
  • Xavier Clerc, INRIA