ACM

ACM SIGPLAN 2001 Conference on
Programming Language Design and Implementation

SNOWBIRD, UTAH  June 20 - 22, 2001

Sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN in cooperation with ACM SIGSOFT

 

The technical program will be posted on this web page shortly.

 

Call For Papers

Conference Chair:  Michael Burke - mgburke@us.ibm.com

Program Chair:      Mary Lou Soffa - soffa@cs.pitt.edu
 

Co-located Events:

OM 2001: The First Workshop on Optimization of Middleware and Distributed Systems. The goal of the workshop (first in a series) is to discuss how programming and compilation technology can help optimize modern internet software.
PASTE01: Workshop on Program Analysis for Software Tools and Engineering. The goal of PASTE '01 is to bring together members of the program analysis, software tools, and software engineering communities to focus on applications of program analysis techniques in software tools.  PASTE '01 will provide a forum for the presentation of exciting new results in areas including program analysis for program understanding, debugging, testing and reverse engineering; integration of program analysis into programming environments; user interfaces for software tools and software visualization; applications of program slicing and model checking; tradeoffs between static and dynamic analyses; and issues in scaling analyses and user interfaces to deal with large systems.  PASTE '01 will be a true workshop.  In addition to presentations of refereed papers, there will be several invited talks, organized discussions on areas of widespread interest, and ample time for general discussion and debate.
LCTES 2001: The Workshop on Languages, Compilers and Tools for Embedded Systems. LCTES 2001 will be organized immediately following PLDI on June 22 and June 23, 2001.The workshop (which also includes and industrial panel) focuses on investigating issues in the analysis and optimizations for both stand-alone and networked embedded systems from the perspectives of speed, code size and power.  As the application domains of the embedded systems widen, design trade-offs between  hardware and software layers also become quite complex and require research.  For more information, please refer to the LCTES Web Site.