The 26th International Symposium on Principles and Practice of Declarative Programming

Event Dates

Sep 09, 2024 - Sep 11, 2024

Location

Milan, Italy

Submission Deadline

May 13, 2024

The 26th International Symposium on

Principles and Practice of Declarative Programming

Part of FM 2024 and co-located with LOPSTR 2024, FACS 2024, FMICS 2024,

and TAP 2024.

September 9-11, 2024 – Milan, Italy

https://ppdp2024.github.io/

Important dates:

– Title and abstract registration: 06 May 2024 (AoE)

– Paper submission: 13 May 2024 (AoE)

– Rebuttal period (48 hours): 22-23 June 2024 (AoE)

– Author notification: 3 July 2024

– Final paper version: 24 July 2024

OVERVIEW

The PPDP 2024 symposium brings together researchers from the

declarative programming communities, including those working in the

functional, logic, answer-set, and constraint handling programming

paradigms. The goal is to stimulate research in the use of logical

formalisms and methods for analyzing, performing, specifying, and

reasoning about computations, including mechanisms for concurrency,

security, static analysis, and verification.

PPDP 24 will be held at Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy and,

as part of FM 2024. At least one of the authors of an accepted

paper is expected to attend the conference and present the paper.

Information about venue and travel will be available on the FM 2024

website.

Submissions are invited on all topics related to declarative

programming, from principles to practice, from foundations to

applications. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

– Language Design: domain-specific languages; interoperability;

concurrency, parallelism and distribution; modules; functional

languages; reactive languages; languages with objects; languages for

quantum computing; languages inspired by biological and chemical

computation; metaprogramming.

– Declarative languages in artificial intelligence: logic programming;

database languages; knowledge representation languages;

probabilistic languages; differentiable languages.

– Implementations: abstract machines; interpreters; compilation;

compile-time and run-time optimization; memory management.

– Foundations: types; logical frameworks; monads and effects;

semantics.

– Analysis and Transformation: partial evaluation; abstract

interpretation; control flow; data flow; information flow;

termination analysis; resource analysis; type inference and type

checking; verification; validation; debugging; testing.

– Tools and Applications: programming and proof environments;

verification tools; case studies in proof assistants or interactive

theorem provers; certification; novel applications of declarative

programming inside and outside of CS; declarative programming

pearls; practical experience reports and industrial application;

education.

PAPER SUBMISSION

Submissions can be made in three categories:

– Regular Research Papers,

– System Descriptions, and

– Experience Reports.

Submissions of Research Papers must present original research which is

unpublished and not submitted elsewhere. They must not exceed 12 pages

ACM style 2-column (including figures, but excluding bibliography).

Work that already appeared in unpublished or informally

published workshop proceedings may be submitted (please contact the PC

chair in case of questions). Research papers will be judged on

originality, significance, correctness, clarity, and readability.

Submission of System Descriptions must describe a working system whose

description has not been published or submitted elsewhere. They must

not exceed 10 pages and should contain a link to a working

system. System Descriptions must be marked as such at the time of

submission and will be judged on originality, significance,

usefulness, clarity, and readability.

Submissions of Experience Reports are meant to help create a body of

published, refereed, citable evidence where declarative programming

such as functional, logic, answer-set, constraint programming, etc.,

is used in practice. They must not exceed 5 pages **including references**.

Experience Reports must be marked as such at the time

of submission and need not report original research results. They will

be judged on significance, usefulness, clarity, and readability.

Possible topics for an Experience Report include, but are not limited to:

– insights gained from real-world projects using declarative

programming

– comparison of declarative programming with conventional

programming in the context of an industrial project or a

university curriculum

– curricular issues encountered when using declarative programming

in education

– real-world constraints that created special challenges for an

implementation of a declarative language or for declarative

programming in general

– novel use of declarative programming in the classroom

– programming pearl that illustrates a nifty new data structure or

programming technique.

Supplementary material may be provided via a link to an extended

version of the submission (recommended), or in a clearly marked appendix

beyond the above-mentioned page limits. Reviewers are not required to

study extended versions or any material beyond the respective page

limit. Material beyond the page limit will not be included in the

final published version.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

For each paper category, you must use the most recent version of the

“Current ACM Master Template” which is available at

(https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template). You must use

the LaTeX sigconf proceedings template as the conference organizers

are unable to process final submissions in other formats.

Authors should note ACM’s statement on author’s

rights (http://authors.acm.org/) which apply to final papers.

Submitted papers should meet the requirements of ACM’s plagiarism

policy] http://www.acm.org/publications/policies/plagiarism_policy).

The reviewing is single-blind, with a two-days rebuttal phase.

PROGRAM CHAIRS

Alessandro Bruni, IT-University of Copenhagen, Denmark,

Alberto Momigliano, Università degli studi di Milano, Italy

PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEMBERS

Amy Felty University of Ottawa

Kaustuv Chaudhuri INRIA

Cristina Matache University of Edinburgh

Małgorzata Biernacka University of Wroclaw

Gabriele Vanoni Università di Bologna and INRIA Sophia Antipolis

Niccolò Veltri Tallinn University of Technology

Marco Gavanelli Università di Ferrara

Marino Miculan Università di Udine

Roberto Casadei Università di Bologna

Yannick Zakowski Inria

Carlos Olarte Université Sorbonne Paris Nord

Frank Pfenning Carnegie Mellon University

Anders Schlichtkrull Aalborg University

Paola Giannini Universita’ del Piemonte Orientale

Wen Kokke University of Strathclyde

Paul Rowe The MITRE Corporation

Xuejing Huang University of Hong Kong