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25th OOPSLA 2010: Reno/Tahoe, Nevada, USA - Proceedings
- William R. Cook, Siobhán Clarke, Martin C. Rinard:
Proceedings of the 25th Annual ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications, OOPSLA 2010, October 17-21, 2010, Reno/Tahoe, Nevada, USA. ACM 2010, ISBN 978-1-4503-0203-6
Keynotes
- Stephanie Forrest:
The case for evolvable software. 1 - Benjamin C. Pierce:
Art, science, and fear. 2 - Kenneth O. Stanley:
To achieve our highest goals, we must be willing to abandon them. 3
Selected papers I
- Michael Roberson, Chandrasekhar Boyapati:
Efficient modular glass box software model checking. 4-21 - Stefan Hanenberg:
An experiment about static and dynamic type systems: doubts about the positive impact of static type systems on development time. 22-35 - Shachar Itzhaky, Sumit Gulwani, Neil Immerman, Mooly Sagiv:
A simple inductive synthesis methodology and its applications. 36-46
Software engineering
- Julien Mercadal, Quentin Enard, Charles Consel, Nicolas Loriant:
A domain-specific approach to architecturing error handling in pervasive computing. 47-61 - Wei Li, Charles Zhang, Songlin Hu:
G-Finder: routing programming questions closer to the experts. 62-73 - Rashina Hoda, Philippe Kruchten, James Noble, Stuart Marshall:
Agility in context. 74-88
Language design, compilation, and optimization
- Joshua S. Auerbach, David F. Bacon, Perry Cheng, Rodric M. Rabbah:
Lime: a Java-compatible and synthesizable language for heterogeneous architectures. 89-108 - Stephen Kou, Jens Palsberg:
From OO to FPGA: fitting round objects into square hardware? 109-124 - Kai Tian, Yunlian Jiang, Eddy Z. Zhang, Xipeng Shen:
An input-centric paradigm for program dynamic optimizations. 125-139
Defect detection
- Benjamin P. Wood, Adrian Sampson, Luis Ceze, Dan Grossman:
Composable specifications for structured shared-memory communication. 140-159 - Yao Shi, Soyeon Park, Zuoning Yin, Shan Lu, Yuanyuan Zhou, Wenguang Chen, Weimin Zheng:
Do I use the wrong definition?: DeFuse: definition-use invariants for detecting concurrency and sequential bugs. 160-174 - Mark Gabel, Junfeng Yang, Yuan Yu, Moisés Goldszmidt, Zhendong Su:
Scalable and systematic detection of buggy inconsistencies in source code. 175-190
Runtime systems
- Kazunori Ogata, Dai Mikurube, Kiyokuni Kawachiya, Scott Trent, Tamiya Onodera:
A study of Java's non-Java memory. 191-204 - Ross McIlroy, Joe Sventek:
Hera-JVM: a runtime system for heterogeneous multi-core architectures. 205-222 - Michal Wegiel, Chandra Krintz:
Cross-language, type-safe, and transparent object sharing for co-located managed runtimes. 223-240
Monitoring
- Guoliang Jin, Aditya V. Thakur, Ben Liblit, Shan Lu:
Instrumentation and sampling strategies for cooperative concurrency bug isolation. 241-255 - Christoph Reichenbach, Neil Immerman, Yannis Smaragdakis, Edward Aftandilian, Samuel Z. Guyer:
What can the GC compute efficiently?: a language for heap assertions at GC time. 256-269 - Rahul Purandare, Matthew B. Dwyer, Sebastian G. Elbaum:
Monitor optimization via stutter-equivalent loop transformation. 270-285
Software structure
- Max Schäfer, Oege de Moor:
Specifying and implementing refactorings. 286-301 - Hoan Anh Nguyen, Tung Thanh Nguyen, Gary Wilson Jr., Anh Tuan Nguyen, Miryung Kim, Tien N. Nguyen:
A graph-based approach to API usage adaptation. 302-321 - Stephen Kell:
Component adaptation and assembly using interface relations. 322-340
Selected papers II
- Bruno C. d. S. Oliveira, Adriaan Moors, Martin Odersky:
Type classes as objects and implicits. 341-360 - Benjamin S. Lerner, Herman Venter, Dan Grossman:
Supporting dynamic, third-party code customizations in JavaScript using aspects. 361-376 - Charlotte Herzeel, Pascal Costanza:
Dynamic parallelization of recursive code: part 1: managing control flow interactions with the continuator. 377-396
Heap analysis
- Isil Dillig, Thomas Dillig, Alex Aiken:
Symbolic heap abstraction with demand-driven axiomatization of memory invariants. 397-410 - Percy Liang, Omer Tripp, Mayur Naik, Mooly Sagiv:
A dynamic evaluation of the precision of static heap abstractions. 411-427 - Mario Méndez-Lojo, Augustine Mathew, Keshav Pingali:
Parallel inclusion-based points-to analysis. 428-443
Metaprogramming
- Lennart C. L. Kats, Eelco Visser:
The spoofax language workbench: rules for declarative specification of languages and IDEs. 444-463 - Marco Servetto, Elena Zucca:
MetaFJig: a meta-circular composition language for Java-like classes. 464-483 - Karl Klose, Klaus Ostermann:
Modular logic metaprogramming. 484-503
Modularity
- Stephan van Staden, Cristiano Calcagno:
Reasoning about multiple related abstractions with MultiStar. 504-519 - Xin Qi, Andrew C. Myers:
Homogeneous family sharing. 520-538 - Shigeru Chiba, Atsushi Igarashi, Salikh Zakirov:
Mostly modular compilation of crosscutting concerns by contextual predicate dispatch. 539-554
Higher-order, continuations, futures
- Casey Klein, Matthew Flatt, Robert Bruce Findler:
Random testing for higher-order, stateful programs. 555-566 - Jay A. McCarthy:
The two-state solution: native and serializable continuations accord. 567-582 - James Swaine, Kevin Tew, Peter A. Dinda, Robert Bruce Findler, Matthew Flatt:
Back to the futures: incremental parallelization of existing sequential runtime systems. 583-597
Sharing
- Yoav Zibin, Alex Potanin, Paley Li, Mahmood Ali, Michael D. Ernst:
Ownership and immutability in generic Java. 598-617 - Nicholas Cameron, James Noble, Tobias Wrigstad:
Tribal ownership. 618-633 - Nicholas D. Matsakis, Thomas R. Gross:
A time-aware type system for data-race protection and guaranteed initialization. 634-651
Concurrent programming
- Gautam Upadhyaya, Samuel P. Midkiff, Vijay S. Pai:
Automatic atomic region identification in shared memory SPMD programs. 652-670 - Aditya Kulkarni, Yu David Liu, Scott F. Smith:
Task types for pervasive atomicity. 671-690 - Sebastian Burckhardt, Alexandro Baldassin, Daan Leijen:
Concurrent programming with revisions and isolation types. 691-707
JIT compilation and tools
- Michael Bebenita, Florian Brandner, Manuel Fähndrich, Francesco Logozzo, Wolfram Schulte, Nikolai Tillmann, Herman Venter:
SPUR: a trace-based JIT compiler for CIL. 708-725 - Puneet Kapur, Bradley Cossette, Robert J. Walker:
Refactoring references for library migration. 726-738 - Erik R. Altman, Matthew Arnold, Stephen Fink, Nick Mitchell:
Performance analysis of idle programs. 739-753
Onward! long papers: decoupling
- Samuel Davis, Gregor Kiczales:
Registration-based language abstractions. 754-773 - Toon Verwaest, Camillo Bruni, David Gurtner, Adrian Lienhard, Oscar Nierstrasz:
Pinocchio: bringing reflection to life with first-class interpreters. 774-789 - Hridesh Rajan, Steven M. Kautz, Wayne Rowcliffe:
Concurrency by modularity: design patterns, a case in point. 790-805
Onward! long papers: computing
- Martin C. Rinard, Henry Hoffmann, Sasa Misailovic, Stelios Sidiroglou:
Patterns and statistical analysis for understanding reduced resource computing. 806-821 - Andrew Sorensen, Henry J. Gardner:
Programming with time: cyber-physical programming with impromptu. 822-834 - Hassan Chafi, Zach DeVito, Adriaan Moors, Tiark Rompf, Arvind K. Sujeeth, Pat Hanrahan, Martin Odersky, Kunle Olukotun:
Language virtualization for heterogeneous parallel computing. 835-847
Onward! long papers: analysis
- Harold Ossher, Rachel K. E. Bellamy, Ian Simmonds, David Amid, Ateret Anaby-Tavor, Matthew Callery, Michael Desmond, Jacqueline de Vries, Amit Fisher, Sophia Krasikov:
Flexible modeling tools for pre-requirements analysis: conceptual architecture and research challenges. 848-864 - Tudor Dumitras, Priya Narasimhan, Eli Tilevich:
To upgrade or not to upgrade: impact of online upgrades across multiple administrative domains. 865-876 - Kenneth C. Arnold, Henry Lieberman:
Managing ambiguity in programming by finding unambiguous examples. 877-884
Onward! essays
- Richard P. Gabriel, Kevin J. Sullivan:
Better science through art. 885-900 - Jenny Quillien, Dave West:
Rubber ducks, nightmares, and unsaturated predicates: proto-scientific schemata are good for agile. 901-917 - Lennart C. L. Kats, Eelco Visser, Guido Wachsmuth:
Pure and declarative syntax definition: paradise lost and regained. 918-932 - Stefan Hanenberg:
Faith, hope, and love: an essay on software science's neglect of human factors. 933-946 - Paul Adamczyk, Munawar Hafiz:
The Tower of Babel did not fail. 947-957
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