IMPORTANT DATES:
IMPORTANT CHANGE:
PLDI is a forum where researchers, developers, educators, and practitioners can exchange information on the latest practical and experimental work in the design and implementation of programming languages. The PLDI conference seeks original research papers that focus on practical issues in the design, development, implementation and use of programming languages. Emphasis is placed on novel language designs, innovative and creative approaches to compile-time and run-time technology, and results from experimental studies of actual implementations.
Papers are solicited on, but not limited to, these topics:
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Prospective authors should submit a paper through the PLDI web site by Thursday, November 16, 2000 at 11:59 PM EST. In keeping with the convention established in the last few years, the deadline is firm and no extensions will be given. The paper is restricted to 10 pages using the ACM format. Templates for ACM format are available for Word Perfect, Microsoft Word and Latex and are located at http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html. You can also use the ACM "old Latex format" which can be found at http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/PUBFORM.STY. Web-based electronic submission is required. Submissions should be in PDF (preferably) or Postscript that is interpretable by Ghostscript and printable on US Letter and A4 sized paper. Those individuals for which these requirements are a hardship should contact the program chair. Papers that exceed the length requirement or are late will be rejected by the program chair. Papers already being reviewed by another conference are not eligible; if a closely related paper has been submitted to a journal, the authors must notify the program chair. The program committee will evaluate the technical contribution of each submission as well as its general accessibility to the PLDI audience. Papers will be judged on significance, originality, relevance, correctness, and clarity. The paper must be organized so that it is easily understood by an audience with varied expertise. The paper should clearly identify what has been accomplished, why it is significant, and how it compares with previous work. Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection by February 2, 2001 . Full versions of accepted papers must be formatted to ACM conventions. A camera-ready copy and an electronic version must be received by ACM no later than April 9, 200. Authors of accepted papers must sign a copyright release form. Proceedings will be distributed at the conference and will appear as an issue of SIGPLAN Notices. Papers published in the proceedings are eligible for publication in refereed ACM publications at the discretion of the editors.
Proposals for co-locating workshops to be held before and after the conference are also solicited; prospective workshop organizers should contact the general chair.
General Chair Michael Burke IBM T.J. Watson Research Labs burkem@watson.ibm.com |
Program Chair Mary Lou Soffa University of Pittsburgh soffa@cs.pitt.edu |
Program Committee
Vikram Adve, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Evelyn Duesterwald, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories |
Christine Eisenbeis, INRIA Rocquencourt |
Kathleen Fisher, AT&T Labs |
Cormac Flanagan, Compaq Systems Research |
Wilson Hsieh, University of Utah |
Paul Hudak, Yale University |
Roy Ju, Intel Corp |
George Necula, University of California, Berkeley |
Santosh Pande, Georgia Tech |
Keshav Pingali, Cornel University |
Andreas Podelski, Max Planck Institute, Saarbruecken |
William Pugh, University of Maryland |
Erik Ruf, Microsoft Research |
V.C. Sreedhar, IBM T.J. Watson Research Lab |
David Whalley, Florida State University |