
Practical Aspects of Declarative Languages
7th International Symposium, PADL 2005, Long Beach, CA, USA, January 10-11, 2005, Proceedings
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 14. January 2005
Book
Paperback/Softback
VIII, 272 pages
978-3-540-24362-5 (ISBN)
Description
The International Symposium on Practical Aspects of Declarative Languages (PADL) is a forum for researchers and practioners to present original work emphasizing novel applications and implementation techniques for all forms of declarativeconcepts,includingfunctional,logic,constraints,etc.Declarativel- guages build on sound theoretical foundations to provide attractive frameworks for application development. These languages have been successfully applied to a wide array of di?erent real-world situations, including database management, active networks, software engineering, decision support systems, or music c- position; whereas new developments in theory and implementation have opened up new application areas. Inversely, applications often drive the progress in the theory and implementation of declarative systems, as well as bene?t from this progress. The 7th PADL Symposium was held in Long Beach, California on January 10-11, 2005, and was co-located with ACM's Principles of Programming L- guages(POPL).From36 submitted papers,the ProgramCommittee selected 17 papers for presentation at the symposium, based upon at least three reviews for eachpaper,providedfromProgramCommitteemembersandadditionalreferees.
Two invited talks were presented at the conference: one by Norman R- sey (Harvard University) entitled "Building the World from First Principles: Declarative Machine Descriptions and Compiler Construction"; and a second by Saumya Debray (University of Arizona) entitled "Code Compression." Following what has become a tradition in PADL symposia, the Program Committee selected one paper to receive the "Most Practical Paper" award. This year the paper judged the best in terms of practicality, originality, and claritywas"AProvablyCorrectCompilerforE?cientModelCheckingofMobile Processes,"byPingYang,YifeiDong,C.R.Ramakrishnan,andScottA.Smolka.
Two invited talks were presented at the conference: one by Norman R- sey (Harvard University) entitled "Building the World from First Principles: Declarative Machine Descriptions and Compiler Construction"; and a second by Saumya Debray (University of Arizona) entitled "Code Compression." Following what has become a tradition in PADL symposia, the Program Committee selected one paper to receive the "Most Practical Paper" award. This year the paper judged the best in terms of practicality, originality, and claritywas"AProvablyCorrectCompilerforE?cientModelCheckingofMobile Processes,"byPingYang,YifeiDong,C.R.Ramakrishnan,andScottA.Smolka.
More details
Series
Edition
2005 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
VIII, 272 p.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
452 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-540-24362-5 (9783540243625)
DOI
10.1007/b105205
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Invited Talks.- Building the World from First Principles: Declarative Machine Descriptions and Compiler Construction.- Code Compression.- Papers.- Functional Framework for Sound Synthesis.- Specializing Narrowing for Timetable Generation: A Case Study.- Character-Based Cladistics and Answer Set Programming.- Role-Based Declarative Synchronization for Reconfigurable Systems.- Towards a More Practical Hybrid Probabilistic Logic Programming Framework.- Safe Programming with Pointers Through Stateful Views.- Towards Provably Correct Code Generation via Horn Logical Continuation Semantics.- A Provably Correct Compiler for Efficient Model Checking of Mobile Processes.- An Ordered Logic Program Solver.- Improving Memory Usage in the BEAM.- Solving Constraints on Sets of Spatial Objects.- Discovery of Minimal Unsatisfiable Subsets of Constraints Using Hitting Set Dualization.- Solving Collaborative Fuzzy Agents Problems with CLP( ).- Improved Fusion for Optimizing Generics.- The Program Inverter LRinv and Its Structure.- A Full Pattern-Based Paradigm for XML Query Processing.- Type Class Directives.