UTP 2012 - 4th International Symposium on Unifying Theories of Programming (UTP 2012)
Topics/Call fo Papers
Interest in the fundamental problem of the combination of formal notations and theories of programming has grown consistently in recent years. The theories define, in various different ways, many common notions, such as abstraction, refinement, choice, termination, feasibility, concurrency and communication. Despite these differences, such theories may be unified in a way which greatly facilitates their study and comparison. Moreover, such a unification offers a means of combining different languages describing various facets and artifacts of software development in a seamless, logically consistent way. Hoare and He's Unifying Theories of Programming (UTP) is widely acknowledged one of the most significant such unification approaches to have emerged in the last 15 years.
Based on their pioneering work, the aims of the UTP Symposium series are to continue reaffirming the significance of the ongoing UTP project and to stimulate efforts to advance it by providing a focus for the sharing of results by those already actively contributing, and to raise awareness of the benefits of such unifying theoretical frameworks among the wider computer science and software engineering communities.
To this end the Symposium welcomes contributions on all the themes that can be related to the Unifying Theories of Programming.
Submissions
Papers may be up to 20 pages in length and should be prepared using LaTeX in Springer LNCS paper format. Submissions should be made through the UTP 2012 easyChair.
Publication
Symposium Proceedings will appear in Springer's Lectures Notes in Computer Science (TBC).
Based on their pioneering work, the aims of the UTP Symposium series are to continue reaffirming the significance of the ongoing UTP project and to stimulate efforts to advance it by providing a focus for the sharing of results by those already actively contributing, and to raise awareness of the benefits of such unifying theoretical frameworks among the wider computer science and software engineering communities.
To this end the Symposium welcomes contributions on all the themes that can be related to the Unifying Theories of Programming.
Submissions
Papers may be up to 20 pages in length and should be prepared using LaTeX in Springer LNCS paper format. Submissions should be made through the UTP 2012 easyChair.
Publication
Symposium Proceedings will appear in Springer's Lectures Notes in Computer Science (TBC).
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Last modified: 2011-12-20 18:23:14