Formal techniques can help analyse programs, precisely describe program behaviour, and verify program properties. Modern programming languages are interesting targets for formal techniques due to their ubiquity and wide user base, stable and well-defined interfaces and platforms, and powerful (but also complex) libraries. New languages and applications in this space are continually arising, resulting in new programming languages (PL) research challenges.
Work on formal techniques and tools and on the formal underpinnings of programming languages themselves naturally complement each other. FTfJP is an established workshop which has run annually since 1999 alongside ECOOP, with the goal of bringing together people working in both fields.
The workshop has a broad PL theme. The most important criterion is that submissions will generate interesting discussions within this community. The term “Java-like” is somewhat historic and should be interpreted broadly: FTfJP solicits and welcomes submissions relating to programming languages in general, beyond Java, including submissions related to C#, Scala, and similar languages, and submissions on more general topics that may be relevant to such languages.
Example topics of interest include:
- Language design and semantics
- Type systems
- Concurrency and new application domains
- Specification and verification of program properties
- Program analysis (static or dynamic)
- Program synthesis
- Security
- Pearls (programs or proofs)
FTfJP welcomes submissions on technical contributions, case studies, experience reports, challenge proposals, and position papers.
Tue 18 JulDisplayed time zone: Pacific Time (US & Canada) change
08:00 - 08:30 | |||
08:00 30mCoffee break | Break Catering |
08:30 - 09:00 | |||
09:00 - 10:00 | |||
09:00 60mKeynote | Towards Code-Aware Code Models Keynotes |
09:00 - 10:00 | |||
09:00 60mKeynote | State of state in Dafny FTfJP K. Rustan M. Leino Amazon |
10:00 - 10:30 | |||
10:00 30mCoffee break | Break Catering |
10:30 - 12:00 | |||
10:30 25mTalk | Verifying C++ dynamic binding FTfJP Link to publication DOI Pre-print | ||
10:55 15mTalk | Correctness-by-Construction meets Refinement Types FTfJP Baber Rehman University of Hong Kong | ||
11:10 25mTalk | Towards Verified Scalable Parallel Computing with Coq and Spark FTfJP DOI | ||
11:35 25mTalk | Constructing Structured SSA from FJ FTfJP Kenny Zhuo Ming Lu ISTD, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Daniel Yu Hian Low Singapore University of Technology and Design |
12:00 - 13:30 | |||
12:00 90mLunch | Lunch Catering |
13:30 - 15:00 | |||
13:30 25mTalk | Gradual Guarantee for FJ with lambda-expressions FTfJP Pedro Ângelo University of Porto, Viviana Bono University of Torino, Mariangiola Dezani Università di Torino, Mário Florido Universidade do Porto | ||
13:55 25mTalk | Points-to Analysis for Context-Oriented JavaScript Programs FTfJP Sergio Cardenas Universidad de los Andes, Paul Leger Universidad Católica del Norte, Chile, Hiroaki Fukuda Shibaura Institute of Technology, Nicolás Cardozo Universidad de los Andes DOI Media Attached | ||
14:20 25mTalk | Dependency-free Capture Tracking FTfJP Edward Lee University of Waterloo, Kavin Satheeskumar University of Waterloo, Ondřej Lhoták University of Waterloo |
15:00 - 15:30 | |||
15:00 30mCoffee break | Break Catering |
15:30 - 17:00 | |||
15:30 25mTalk | Runtime verification of hash code in mutable classes FTfJP Davide Ancona DIBRIS, University of Genova, Italy, Angelo Ferrando DIBRIS, Università di Genova, Viviana Mascardi DIBRIS, University of Genova, Italy | ||
15:55 25mTalk | Verifying Well-Typedness Preservation of Refactorings using Scope Graphs FTfJP Luka Miljak Delft University of Technology, Casper Bach Poulsen Delft University of Technology, Flip van Spaendonck TU Eindhoven DOI | ||
16:25 20mTalk | Using Rewrite Strategies for Efficient Functional Automatic Differentiation FTfJP Timon Böhler Technical University of Darmstadt, David Richter Technical University of Darmstadt, Mira Mezini TU Darmstadt Pre-print |
Accepted Papers
Call for Papers
Contributions are sought in two categories:
- Full Papers (6 pages, excluding references) present a technical contribution, case study, or detailed experience report. We welcome both complete and incomplete technical results; ongoing work is particularly welcome, provided it is substantial enough to stimulate interesting discussions.
- Short Papers (2 pages, excluding references) should advocate a promising research direction, or otherwise present a position likely to stimulate discussion at the workshop. We encourage e.g. established researchers to set out a personal vision, and beginning researchers to present a planned path to a PhD.
All submissions and reviews will be managed within EasyChair. Submissions should be made via https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ftfjp2023. There is no need to indicate the paper category (long/short).
Both types of contributions will benefit from feedback received at the workshop. Submissions will be peer reviewed, and will be evaluated based on their clarity and their potential to generate interesting discussions. Reviewing will be single blind, there is no need to anonymize submissions.
The format of the workshop encourages interaction. FTfJP is a forum in which a wide range of people share their expertise, from experienced researchers to beginning PhD students.
All authors should use the official “ACM Master article template”, which can be obtained from the ACM Proceedings Template pages (https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template). Latex users should use the “sigconf” option as well as “review” (to produce line numbers for easy reference by the reviewers). To that end, the following latex code can be placed at the start of the latex document: \documentclass[sigconf,review]{acmart}
All questions about submissions should be emailed to Aaron Tomb aarontomb@gmail.com