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26 mai - 26 mai 2026

Classement: National: Japan (CORE2023)Offline

International Symposium on Functional and Logic Programming

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Aperçu

FLOPS aims to bring together practitioners, researchers and implementers of declarative programming, to discuss mutually interesting results and common problems: theoretical advances, their implementations in language systems and tools, and applications of these systems in practice. The scope includes all aspects of the design, semantics, theory, applications, implementations, and teaching of declarative programming. FLOPS specifically aims to promote cross-fertilization between theory and practice and among different styles of declarative programming. \n\nScope: FLOPS solicits original papers in all areas of declarative programming: functional, logic, functional-logic programming, rewriting systems, formal methods and model checking, program transformations and program refinements; developing programs with the help of theorem provers or SAT/SMT solvers, verifying properties of programs using declarative programming techniques, or statistical methods including generative AI; foundations, language design, implementation issues (compilation techniques, memory management, run-time systems, etc.), applications and case studies. FLOPS promotes cross-fertilization among different styles of declarative programming. Therefore, research papers must be written to be understandable by a wide audience of declarative programmers and researchers. In particular, each submission should explain its contributions in both general and technical terms, clearly identifying what has been accomplished, explaining why it is significant for its area, and comparing it with previous work. Submission of system descriptions and declarative pearls are especially encouraged. \n\nSubmission: Submissions should fall into one of the following categories: Regular research papers: they should describe new results and will be judged on originality, correctness, and significance. System descriptions: they should describe a working system and will be judged on originality, usefulness, and design. Declarative pearls: new and excellent declarative programs or theories with illustrative applications. System descriptions and declarative pearls must be explicitly marked as such in the title. Submissions must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. Work that already appeared in unpublished or informally published workshops proceedings may be submitted. Authors must follow Springer’s Code of Conduct. See also the ACM SIGPLAN Republication Policy. At least one author of each accepted paper should plan to attend the conference in person to present the work: there will be no general facility for online or pre-recorded presentation (but we will do our best to accommodate visa issues and similar unavoidable obstacles). Submissions must be written in English and can be up to 15 pages excluding references, though system descriptions and pearls are typically shorter. The formatting has to conform to Springer’s guidelines. Regular research papers should be supported by proofs and/or experimental results. Reviewing will be single-blind. \n\nPublication: The proceedings will be published by Springer in the LNCS series. We expect to invite the authors of a selection of the best papers to submit an extended version of their FLOPS paper to a special issue which will appear in Science of Computer Programming.

Appel à communications

FLOPS aims to bring together practitioners, researchers and implementers of declarative programming, to discuss mutually interesting results and common problems: theoretical advances, their implementations in language systems and tools, and applications of these systems in practice. The scope includes all aspects of the design, semantics, theory, applications, implementations, and teaching of declarative programming. FLOPS specifically aims to promote cross-fertilization between theory and practice and among different styles of declarative programming. \n\nScope: FLOPS solicits original papers in all areas of declarative programming: functional, logic, functional-logic programming, rewriting systems, formal methods and model checking, program transformations and program refinements; developing programs with the help of theorem provers or SAT/SMT solvers, verifying properties of programs using declarative programming techniques, or statistical methods including generative AI; foundations, language design, implementation issues (compilation techniques, memory management, run-time systems, etc.), applications and case studies. FLOPS promotes cross-fertilization among different styles of declarative programming. Therefore, research papers must be written to be understandable by a wide audience of declarative programmers and researchers. In particular, each submission should explain its contributions in both general and technical terms, clearly identifying what has been accomplished, explaining why it is significant for its area, and comparing it with previous work. Submission of system descriptions and declarative pearls are especially encouraged. \n\nSubmission: Submissions should fall into one of the following categories: Regular research papers: they should describe new results and will be judged on originality, correctness, and significance. System descriptions: they should describe a working system and will be judged on originality, usefulness, and design. Declarative pearls: new and excellent declarative programs or theories with illustrative applications. System descriptions and declarative pearls must be explicitly marked as such in the title. Submissions must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. Work that already appeared in unpublished or informally published workshops proceedings may be submitted. Authors must follow Springer’s Code of Conduct. See also the ACM SIGPLAN Republication Policy. At least one author of each accepted paper should plan to attend the conference in person to present the work: there will be no general facility for online or pre-recorded presentation (but we will do our best to accommodate visa issues and similar unavoidable obstacles). Submissions must be written in English and can be up to 15 pages excluding references, though system descriptions and pearls are typically shorter. The formatting has to conform to Springer’s guidelines. Regular research papers should be supported by proofs and/or experimental results. Reviewing will be single-blind. \n\nPublication: The proceedings will be published by Springer in the LNCS series. We expect to invite the authors of a selection of the best papers to submit an extended version of their FLOPS paper to a special issue which will appear in Science of Computer Programming.

Dates importantes

Dates de la conférence

Conference Date

26 mai 2026

Précédemment :
  • 26 mai 2026 - 28 mai 2026
  • 15 mai 2024 - 17 mai 2024

Soumission

Paper submission

NOUVEAU

16 décembre 2025

Notification

Notification date

NOUVEAU

2 février 2026

Version finale

Camera-ready

NOUVEAU

2 mars 2026

Inscription

Early registration

7 mai 2024

Late registration

7 mai 202414 mai 2024

Classement source

Source: CORE2023

Classement: National: Japan

Domaine de recherche: Theory of computation

Carte

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