Erlang 2015 - Fourteenth ACM SIGPLAN Erlang Workshop
Topics/Call fo Papers
Erlang is a concurrent, distributed functional programming language aimed at systems with requirements of massive concurrency, soft real time response, fault tolerance, and high availability. It has been available as open source for 16 years, creating a community that actively contributes to its already existing rich set of libraries and applications. Originally created for telecom applications, its usage has spread to other domains including e-commerce, banking, databases, and computer telephony and messaging.
Erlang programs are today among the largest applications written in any functional programming language. These applications offer new opportunities to evaluate functional programming and functional programming methods on a very large scale and suggest new problems for the research community to solve.
This workshop will bring together the open source, academic, and industrial programming communities of Erlang. It will enable participants to familiarize themselves with recent developments on new techniques and tools tailored to Erlang, novel applications, draw lessons from users' experiences and identify research problems and common areas relevant to the practice of Erlang and functional programming.
We invite three types of submissions.
Technical papers describing language extensions, critical discussions of the status quo, formal semantics of language constructs, program analysis and transformation, virtual machine extensions and compilation techniques, implementations and interfaces of Erlang in/with other languages, and new tools (profilers, tracers, debuggers, testing frameworks, etc.). The maximum length for technical papers is restricted to 12 pages.
Practice and application papers describing uses of Erlang in the "real-world", Erlang libraries for specific tasks, experiences from using Erlang in specific application domains, reusable programming idioms and elegant new ways of using Erlang to approach or solve a particular problem. The maximum length for the practice and application papers is restricted to 12 pages. Note that this is a maximum length; we welcome shorter papers also, and the program committee will evaluate all papers on an equal basis independent of their lengths.
Poster presentations describing topics related to the workshop goals. Each includes a maximum of 2 pages of the abstract and summary. Presentations in this category will be given an hour of shared simultaneous demonstration time.
Workshop Co-Chairs
Hans Svensson, Quviq AB, Sweden
Melinda Tóth, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
Program Committee
(Note: the Workshop and Program Chairs are also committee members)
Jesper L. Andersen, Independent
Clara Benac Earle, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Laura M. Castro, University of A Coruña, Spain
Christopher Meiklejohn, Basho Technologies, Inc., US
Samuel Rivas, Klarna AB, Sweden
Tee Teoh, Erlang Solutions Ltd, UK
Simon Thompson, University of Kent, UK
Erlang programs are today among the largest applications written in any functional programming language. These applications offer new opportunities to evaluate functional programming and functional programming methods on a very large scale and suggest new problems for the research community to solve.
This workshop will bring together the open source, academic, and industrial programming communities of Erlang. It will enable participants to familiarize themselves with recent developments on new techniques and tools tailored to Erlang, novel applications, draw lessons from users' experiences and identify research problems and common areas relevant to the practice of Erlang and functional programming.
We invite three types of submissions.
Technical papers describing language extensions, critical discussions of the status quo, formal semantics of language constructs, program analysis and transformation, virtual machine extensions and compilation techniques, implementations and interfaces of Erlang in/with other languages, and new tools (profilers, tracers, debuggers, testing frameworks, etc.). The maximum length for technical papers is restricted to 12 pages.
Practice and application papers describing uses of Erlang in the "real-world", Erlang libraries for specific tasks, experiences from using Erlang in specific application domains, reusable programming idioms and elegant new ways of using Erlang to approach or solve a particular problem. The maximum length for the practice and application papers is restricted to 12 pages. Note that this is a maximum length; we welcome shorter papers also, and the program committee will evaluate all papers on an equal basis independent of their lengths.
Poster presentations describing topics related to the workshop goals. Each includes a maximum of 2 pages of the abstract and summary. Presentations in this category will be given an hour of shared simultaneous demonstration time.
Workshop Co-Chairs
Hans Svensson, Quviq AB, Sweden
Melinda Tóth, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
Program Committee
(Note: the Workshop and Program Chairs are also committee members)
Jesper L. Andersen, Independent
Clara Benac Earle, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Laura M. Castro, University of A Coruña, Spain
Christopher Meiklejohn, Basho Technologies, Inc., US
Samuel Rivas, Klarna AB, Sweden
Tee Teoh, Erlang Solutions Ltd, UK
Simon Thompson, University of Kent, UK
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2015-02-15 21:19:53