[TYPES/announce] Deadline extension: DBPL 19
Alvin Cheung
akcheung at cs.washington.edu
Wed Feb 20 02:39:39 EST 2019
Due to multiple requests, we are extending the deadline for *both* paper
tracks to *Monday Feb 25* (anytime on Earth). Please feel free to submit
via our hotcrp website. Questions can be directed to
dbpl19-pcchairs at cs.washington.edu .
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The 17th International Symposium on Database Programming Languages
https://pldi19.sigplan.org/track/dbpl-2019-papers
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
June 23, 2019
hosted as part of PLDI 2019
Call for Papers
For over 25 years, DBPL has established itself as the principal venue
for publishing and discussing new ideas at the intersection of databases
and programming languages. Many key contributions in query languages for
object-oriented data, persistent databases, nested relational data, and
semistructured data, as well as fundamental ideas in types for query
languages, were first announced at DBPL. Today, this creative research
area is broadening into a subfield of data-centric computation,
currently scattered among a range of venues. DBPL is an established
destination for such new ideas and solicits submissions from researchers
in databases, programming languages or any other community interested in
the design, implementation or foundations of data-centric computation.
Scope
-----
DBPL solicits practical and theoretical papers in all topics at the
intersection of databases and programming languages. Papers emphasizing
new topics or emerging areas are especially
welcome. Suggested, but not exclusive, topics of interest for
submissions include:
- Compiling Query Languages to Modern Hardware
- Data-Centric Programming Abstractions, Comprehensions, Monads
- Data Integration, Exchange, and Interoperability
- Data Synchronization and Bidirectional Transformations
- Declarative Data Centers (e.g., distributed query processing,
serverless computing platforms, social computing platforms, etc)
- Emerging and Nontraditional Data Models
- Language-Based Security in Data Management
- Language-Integrated Query Mechanisms
- Managing Uncertain and Imprecise Information
- Metaprogramming and Heterogeneous Staged Computation
- Programming Language Support for Data-Centric Programming (e.g.,
databases, web programming, machine learning, etc)
- Query Compilation and In-memory Databases
- Query Language Design and Implementation
- Query Transformation and Optimization
- Schema Mapping and Metadata Management
- Semantics and Verification of Database Systems
- Stream Data Processing and Query Languages
- Type and Effect Systems for Data-Centric Programming
Author Guidelines
-----------------
Prospective authors are invited to submit full papers in English
presenting original research. Submitted papers must be unpublished and
not submitted for publication elsewhere. Submissions should be no more
than 10 pages long, excluding references, in the two-column ACM
proceedings format, following PLDI's formatting requirements
(https://pldi19.sigplan.org/track/pldi-2019-papers#Call-for-Papers).
Each submission should begin with a succinct statement of the problem
and a summary of the main results. Authors may provide more details to
substantiate the main claims of the paper by including a clearly marked
appendix at the end of the submission, which is not included in the page
limit and is read at the discretion of the committee.
At least one author of each accepted paper must attend the symposium to
present their work.
Short papers of at most 4 pages (same format as long papers) describing
work in progress, demos, research challenges or visions are also
welcome. Accepted short papers may be included or excluded from the
formal proceedings, whichever the author(s) prefer.
Full and short papers are both due on the deadline, February 25, 2019.
Instructions on how to submit will be posted on the symposium website
noted above.
Review is single-blind, so authors do not need to anonymize their
submissions. PC submissions are allowed, except for the co-chairs.
Important Dates
---------------
- Paper Submission: February 25, 2019
- Notification: March 29, 2019
- Final versions due: April 16, 2019
- Symposium: June 23, 2019
Proceedings
-----------
Accepted papers will appear as part of the PLDI Proceedings for DBPL 2019.
Program Committee
-----------------
*Program Co-Chairs*
Alvin Cheung, University of Washington
Kim Nguyen, Universite Paris-Sud
*Program Committee*
William Cook, University of Texas at Austin
Vasiliki Kalavri, ETH
Harshad Kasture, Oracle
Oleg Kiselyov, University of Tsukuba
Sam Lindley, University of Edinburgh
Tiark Rompf, Purdue University
Stefanie Scherzinger, OTH Regensberg
Amir Shaikhha, EPFL / University of Oxford
Avi Shinnar, IBM
Guido Wachsmuth, Oracle
Melanie Wu, Pomona College
History
-------
The 17th Symposium on Data Base Programming Languages (DBPL 2019)
continues the tradition of excellence initiated by its predecessors in
Roscoff, Finistere (1987), Salishan, Oregon (1989), Nafplion, Argolida
(1991), Manhattan, New York (1993), Gubbio, Umbria (1995), Estes Park,
Colorado (1997), Kinloch Rannoch, Scotland (1999), Marino, Rome (2001),
Potsdam, Germany (2003), Trondheim, Norway (2005), Vienna, Austria
(2007), Lyon, France (2009), Seattle, Washington (2011), Riva del Garda,
Italy (2013), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2015), Munich, Germany (2017).
DBPL was affiliated with VLDB from 1999-2013 and in
2017. In 2015, it is affiliated with SPLASH for the first time and in
2019, it is affiliated with PLDI for the first time.
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