PLDI 2013
ACM logo
Seattle, Washington, USA
16 June 2013 -- 22 June 2013
PLDI 2013 is over! See you next year in Edinburgh!

About PLDI

PLDI 2013 is the 34th annual ACM SIGPLAN conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation.

PLDI is a forum where researchers, developers, educators, and practitioners exchange information on the latest practical and experimental work in the design and implementation of programming languages.

PLDI seeks original research papers that focus on the design, implementation, development, and use of programming languages.

PLDI emphasizes innovative and creative approaches to compile-time and runtime technology; novel language designs and features; and results from implementations.

The conference itself will be held Monday through Wednesday June 17-19. We currently expect tutorials on the preceding Sunday, and a number of co-located conferences on the following Thursday and Friday.

The original call for papers and tutorials are available here.

Distinguished paper awards

This year, there were four distinguished papers:

Colocated events and tutorials

There are six tutorials this year:

June 16 June 17 June 18 June 19 June 20 June 21 June 22
a.m.p.m. PLDI SAS
Tut. 1Tut. 4 SASB ISMM
Tut. 2Tut. 5 TAPAS LCTES
Tut. 3Tut. 6 PASTE MSPC
PLAS PLOOC
SOAP
X10
 
Reception SRC Excursion*

* Sponsored by Microsoft, not ACM.

Student research competition

The student research competition provides an opportunity for graduate and undergraduate students attending PLDI 2013 to present their research work in the area of programming language design and implementation. The goal is to give students a forum to discuss their research with experts in their field, and to help them sharpen their research and communication skills.

For more information, see:

http://www.cs.wm.edu/~idillig/pldi13-src/

FIT session

The PLDI Fun and Interesting Thoughts (FIT) session provides a venue for new, interesting, provocative, and/or inspiring ideas. The session is open to any idea within the purview of the field of programming languages, broadly construed. Ideas that provide a new perspective on the field, challenge the conventional value system, or point to new technical or social directions for the field are especially welcome.

We anticipate that the PLDI FIT session will consist of short (5 to 10 minute) talks. Each PLDI FIT submission should consist of a short writeup whose length is consistent with the brevity of the planned presentation. We anticipate that one to two pages should be sufficient. Note that it is the responsibility of the authors to deliver a fun and interesting writeup - the members of the program committee are under no obligation to read a writeup they do not find fun and interesting.

Please mail submissions directly to pldifit2013@csail.mit.edu by May 4th.

Notification of acceptance will be sent on May 20th.

Registration

You may now register for PLDI at the following link:

https://regmaster3.com/2013conf/PLDI13/register.php

Early registration discount ends May 15!

Hotel information

This year's PLDI, including SAS, LCTES, ISMM, and co-located workshops, will be held at the Red Lion 5th Avenue.

To make a reservation at the conference hotel, The Red Lion Fifth Avenue, at the conference rate of $159 + tax go to:

www.seattleredlionfifthavenue.com

In the reservations box enter your arrival and departure dates, number of adults and children. Click on the Rate Type box and enter PLDI0615 for the Group Code / Promo Code. In section 2 of the result page click "CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE" to see all available room types. Select the desired room type and add to the cart.

Please use the same promo code for PLDI or any of its affiliated events.

Hotel space is limited. Please complete your hotel reservation as soon as possible, and no later than May 18.

Some nights are already booked up for the Red Lion Fith Avenue.

There are many hotels nearby. The Sheraton is about a block and a half away.

Travel

If you require a visa, please see the Visa Support Letter instruction page.

Travel support

The SIGPLAN professional activities commitee has limited travel support available to help some attendees attend SIGPLAN events.

Students in need of travel support are encouraged to apply.

For more details, see:

http://www.sigplan.org/PAC/Main

In addition to the regular PAC funding, US students are eligible for travel support from the National Science Foundation. Applying for NSF support is straightforward, by simply filling out the "Funding from other sources" section on the PAC website as part of your regular application.

Only those students who are affiliated with a US institution AND are US citizens or permanent residents are eligible for alternative funding. Please do not fill out the "Funding from other sources" section if you do not meet these conditions.

Schedule

For travel planning, the PLDI program will run from 9:00am on Monday to 5:00pm on Wednesday.

Organizers

General Chair: Hans-J. Boehm
Program Chair: Cormac Flanagan
Tutorials Chair: Dan Grossman
Publicity Chair: Matt Might
Student Research Chair: Isil Dillig
Finance Chair: Iulian Neamtiu
Sponsorship Chair: Iulian Neamtiu
FIT Chair: Martin Rinard

Program Committee

Umut A. Acar Carnegie Mellon University
Vikram Adve University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
David I. August Princeton University
Emery Berger University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Michael Bond Ohio State University
Swarat Chaudhuri Rice University
Perry Cheng IBM Research
Trishul Chilimbi Microsoft Research Redmond
Thomas Dillig College of William & Mary
Matthew Flatt University of Utah
Laurie Hendren McGill University
Michael Hicks University of Maryland, College Park
Martin Hirzel IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Suresh Jagannathan Purdue University
Pramod Joisha HP Labs
Sorin Lerner University of California, San Diego
Shan Lu University of Wisconsin-Madison
Mira Mezini Technische Universitaet Darmstadt
Mayur Naik Georgia Tech
Toshio Nakatani IBM Research - Tokyo
Satish Narayanasamy University of Michigan
Keshav Pingali University of Texas, Austin
Lawrence Rauchwerger Texas A&M University
Tatiana Shpeisman Intel Labs
Jeremy Siek University of Colorado at Boulder
Yannis Smaragdakis U. of Athens
Armando Solar-Lezama MIT
Martin Vechev ETH Zurich
Jan Vitek Purdue University
Katherine Yelick University of California, Berkeley

External review committee

Amal Ahmed Northeastern University
Alex Aiken Stanford University
Jonathan Aldrich Carnegie Mellon University
J. Nelson Amaral University of Alberta
Steve Blackburn Australian National University
Sebastian Burckhardt Microsoft Research, Redmond
Adam Chlipala MIT
Byron Cook Microsoft Research, Cambridge
Sophia Drossopoulou Imperial College London,
Matthew Dwyer University of Nebraska
Laura Effinger-Dean Carleton College
Tayfun Elmas Google
Erik Ernst Aarhus University
Robby Findler Northwestern University
Stephen Fink IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Kathleen Fisher Tufts University
Jeffrey Foster University of Maryland, College Park
Michael Franz University of California, Irvine
Stephen Freund Williams College
Andreas Gal Mozilla
David Gregg Trinity College Dublin
Robert Grimm New York University
Dan Grossman University of Washington
Arjun Guha Cornell University
Sumit Gulwani Microsoft Research, Redmond
Aarti Gupta NEC Labs America
Rajiv Gupta University of California Riverside
Mary Hall University of Utah
Tim Harris Oracle Labs, Cambridge
Hiroshi Inoue IBM Research - Tokyo
Tomas Kalibera University of Kent
Christoph Kessler Linkoping University
Gary T. Leavens University of Central Florida
Xavier Leroy INRIA
Ondřej Lhoták University of Waterloo
Ben Liblit University of Wisconsin–Madison
Ben Livshits Microsoft Research, Redmond
Rupak Majumdar Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
Yitzhak Mandelbaum Google
Todd Millstein University of California, Los Angeles
Madanlal Musuvathi Microsoft Research, Redmond
Anders Møller Aarhus University
Aditya Nori Microsoft Research India
Klaus Ostermann Philipps-Universitaet Marburg
David Pearce Victoria University of Wellington
Erez Petrank Technion
David Pichardie INRIA / Harvard University
Filip Pizlo Apple Inc.
Bill Pugh University of Maryland
Sriram Rajamani Microsoft Research India
John Regehr The University of Utah
Susmit Sarkar University of Cambridge
Max Schaefer IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Koushik Sen University of California, Berkeley
Zhong Shao Yale
Manu Sridharan IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Emina Torlak University of California, Berkeley
Viktor Vafeiadis Max Planck Institute for Software Systems (MPI-SWS)
Mandana Vaziri IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Christoph von Praun University of Applied Sciences Nuremberg
Stephanie Weirich University of Pennsylvania
Adam Welc Oracle Labs
Eran Yahav Technion
Greta Yorsh ARM
Ben Zorn Microsoft Research

Gold Supporters

Oracle

Microsoft Research


Silver Supporters

Google

LogicBlox

Intel

Bronze Supporters

Facebook

HP Labs

IBM Research

Galois

Other Supporters

NEC Labs

National Science Foundation

Sponsors

PLDI 2013 is sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN:

Association for Computing Machinery