Programming Languages and Systems: 9th European Symposium on Programming, ESOP 2000 Held as Part of the Joint European Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2000 Berlin, Germany, March 25- April 2, 2000 ProceedingsGert Smolka Springer, 26/06/2003 - 428 من الصفحات ETAPS 2000 was the third instance of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software. ETAPS is an annual federated conference that was established in 1998 by combining a number of existing and new conferences. This year it comprised ve conferences (FOSSACS, FASE, ESOP, CC, TACAS), ve satellite workshops (CBS, CMCS, CoFI, GRATRA, INT), seven invited lectures, a panel discussion, and ten tutorials. The events that comprise ETAPS address various aspects of the system de- lopment process, including speci cation, design, implementation, analysis, and improvement. The languages, methodologies, and tools which support these - tivities are all well within its scope. Di erent blends of theory and practice are represented, with an inclination towards theory with a practical motivation on one hand and soundly-based practice on the other. Many of the issues involved in software design apply to systems in general, including hardware systems, and the emphasis on software is not intended to be exclusive. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 83
الصفحة 1
... programming notation. They have their theoretical foundation in Join ... programming and Petri nets. As in functional programming, the basic computation step ... language, it is essential to have a means of aggregating functions and data ...
... programming notation. They have their theoretical foundation in Join ... programming and Petri nets. As in functional programming, the basic computation step ... language, it is essential to have a means of aggregating functions and data ...
الصفحة 2
... language which maps directly into our object-based extension of join. An implementation of Silk is publicly available. There are also other languages which are based in some form on join calculus, and which express the constructs of ...
... language which maps directly into our object-based extension of join. An implementation of Silk is publicly available. There are also other languages which are based in some form on join calculus, and which express the constructs of ...
الصفحة 6
9th European Symposium on Programming, ESOP 2000 Held as Part of the Joint ... program is treated like a block delimited with braces, i.e. indentation is ... language like Haskell or ML. We assume that evaluation of function arguments ...
9th European Symposium on Programming, ESOP 2000 Held as Part of the Joint ... program is treated like a block delimited with braces, i.e. indentation is ... language like Haskell or ML. We assume that evaluation of function arguments ...
الصفحة 22
... programming notation we have used in the preceding sections. This section fills the gap, by showing how Silk constructs which are not directly supported in object-based join calculus can be mapped into equivalent constructs which are ...
... programming notation we have used in the preceding sections. This section fills the gap, by showing how Silk constructs which are not directly supported in object-based join calculus can be mapped into equivalent constructs which are ...
الصفحة 24
... Programming, 7(1):1–69, 1997. 3. Z. Ariola and A. Sabry. Correctness of monadic state: An imperative call-by-need calculus. In Proc. 25th ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, pages 62–74, 1998. 4. A. Asperti and N ...
... Programming, 7(1):1–69, 1997. 3. Z. Ariola and A. Sabry. Correctness of monadic state: An imperative call-by-need calculus. In Proc. 25th ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, pages 62–74, 1998. 4. A. Asperti and N ...
المحتوى
1 | |
26 | |
On the Expressiveness of Event Notification in DataDriven Coordination | 41 |
FlowDirected Closure Conversion for Typed Languages | 56 |
Beyond Discriminative Types | 72 |
Formalizing Implementation Strategies for FirstClass Continuations | 88 |
Correctness of Java Card Method Lookup via Logical Relations | 104 |
CompileTime Debugging of C Programs Working on Trees | 119 |
Proofnets for Languages with Explicit Control | 245 |
A Calculus for LinkTime Compilation | 260 |
Improving the Representation of Infinite Trees to Deal with Sets of Trees | 275 |
On the Translation of Procedures to Finite Machines | 290 |
A Kleene Analysis of Mobile Ambients | 305 |
A 3Part Type Inference Engine | 320 |
FirstClass Structures for Standard ML | 336 |
ConstraintBased InterProcedural Analysis of Parallel Programs | 351 |
A Calculus for Compiling and Linking Classes | 135 |
Abstract Domains for Universal and Existential Properties | 150 |
A Type System for Bounded Space and Functional InPlace Update | 165 |
Secure Information Flow as Typed Process Behaviour | 180 |
Implementing Groundness Analysis with Definite Boolean Functions | 200 |
The Correctness of Type Specialisation | 215 |
Type Classes with Functional Dependencies | 230 |
Alias Types | 366 |
Polyvariant Flow Analysis with Constrained Types | 382 |
On Exceptions Versus Continuations in the Presence of State | 397 |
Equational Reasoning for Linking with FirstClass Primitive Modules | 412 |
Author Index | 429 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abstract abstract interpretation algorithm ambients application argument automata automaton call/cc closure compiler component Computer Science constraints constructor constructs context Core corresponding CPS programs CPS transformation data-polymorphic defined definition denotes encoding equivalent evaluation example execution paths expression finite first-class continuations flow analysis formal Functional Programming functor Galois Galois connection graph implementation join calculus label lambda calculus Lemma linear logic LNCS Logic Programming m-calculus mapping method MLton module names node operational semantics optimizations pointer polymorphism polyvariant predicate procedure program point Programming Languages proof recursive types reduction relation renaming represent representation result rewrite rules Section Springer-Verlag stack stack machine Standard ML static structure subtyping syntactic syntax Theorem token translation tree type inference type specialiser type system type variables