9th ACM SIGPLAN International Workshop on Libraries, Languages, and Compilers for Array Programming

Event Dates

Jun 17, 2023 - Jun 17, 2023

Location

Orlando, Florida, United States

Submission Deadline

Mar 31, 2023

# ARRAY 2023 – co-located with PLDI 2023 – call for papers

* Submission deadline: 31st of March

* Notification: 21st of April

* Workshop date: 17th of June

* Submission: https://array23.hotcrp.com/

Array programming is at home in many communities, including language

design, library development, optimization, scientific computing, and

across many existing language communities. The ARRAY Workshop series

is intended to bring together researchers from many different

practical and theoretical communities, including language designers,

library developers, type theorists, compiler researchers, and

practitioners. These communities can exchange ideas on the

construction of computational tools for manipulating arrays and

fundamental principles of array programming. Submissions are welcome

in two categories: full papers and extended abstracts. All submissions

should be formatted in conformance with the ACM SIGPLAN proceedings

style. Accepted submissions in either category will be presented at

the workshop. The ARRAY series of workshops explores:

– formal semantics and design issues of array-oriented languages and libraries;

– correctness of array programs, including type-theoretic issues,

formal verification, array models, static analysis;

– productivity and performance in compute-intensive application areas

of array programming;

– systematic notation for array programming, including axis- and

index-based approaches;

– intermediate languages, virtual machines, and program-transformation

techniques for array programs;

– representation of and automated reasoning about mathematical

structure, such as static and dynamic sparsity, low-rank patterns,

and hierarchies of these, with connections to applications such as

graph processing, HPC, tensor computation and deep learning;

– interfaces between array- and non-array code, including approaches

for embedding array programs in general-purpose programming

languages; and

– efficient mapping of array programs, through compilers, libraries,

and code generators, onto execution platforms, targeting

multi-cores, SIMD devices, GPUs, distributed systems, and FPGA

hardware, by fully automatic and user-assisted means.

All submissions must be in PDF format, printable in black and white on

US Letter sized paper. Papers must adhere to the standard SIGPLAN

conference format: two columns, ten-point font.

Full papers may be up to 12 papes, on any topic related to the focus

of the workshop. They will be thoroughly reviewed according to the

usual criteria of relevance, soundness, novelty, and significance;

accepted submissions will be published in the ACM Digital Library as

part of the workshop proceedings.

Extended abstracts may be up to 2 pages; they may describe work in

progress, tool demonstrations, and summaries of work published in full

elsewhere. The focus of the extended abstract should be to explain why

the proposed presentation will be of interest to the ARRAY

audience. Submissions will be lightly reviewed only for relevance to

the workshop, and will not published in the Digital Library.