Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages
The annual ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL) is an academic conference in the field of computer science, with focus on fundamental principles in the design, definition, analysis, and implementation of programming languages, programming systems, and programming interfaces. The venue is jointly sponsored by two Special Interest Groups of the Association for Computing Machinery: SIGPLAN and SIGACT.
POPL ranks as A* (top 4%) in the CORE conference ranking.[1]
The proceedings of the conference are hosted at the ACM Digital Library. They were initially under a paywall, but since 2017 they are published in open access as part of the journal Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages (PACMPL).
Affiliated events
- Declarative Aspects of Multicore Programming (DAMP)
- Foundations and Developments of Object-Oriented Languages (FOOL/WOOD)
- Partial Evaluation and Semantics-Based Program Manipulation (PEPM)
- Practical Applications of Declarative Languages (PADL)
- Programming Language Technologies for XML (PLAN-X)
- Types in Language Design and Implementation (TLDI)
- Verification, Model Checking and Abstract Interpretation (VMCAI)
gollark: I can't see a way you could do anything, but that probably just means my model of your hypothetical system is incomplete rather than that it would actually be entirely secure.
gollark: In practice all sufficiently complex software systems seem to end up with weird ridiculous bugs.
gollark: MIPS seemed vaguely neat/elegant from what I've seen of it, but apparently it's shelved in favour of RISC-V now anyway.
gollark: It's not addressing the same market. There's no RISC-V stuff with x86-level performance.
gollark: Maybe some kind of caching is needed, for efficiency.
See also
References
- "CORE ranking page for POPL". Archived from the original on 2019-02-05. Retrieved 2019-02-05.
External links
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