<div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr">--------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br> CALL FOR PAPERS<br><br> The 2025 Workshop on Scheme and Functional Programming<br> Co-located with ICFP/SPLASH 2025 (Singapore)<br><br><a href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://conf.researchr.org/home/icfp-splash-2025/scheme-2025__;!!IBzWLUs!VxyiJMm7TV4UgRg421X9S61ytu2vQiTgAR8nWMM57g-oH_fB4CYCCPNLe1FGfpOVNIFaY4GLmFzcEpL29rXre5ZDMuj-ykWm$" target="_blank">https://conf.researchr.org/home/icfp-splash-2025/scheme-2025</a><br><br>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br><br>The 2025 Scheme and Functional Programming Workshop is calling <br>for submissions.<br><br>We invite high-quality papers and talk proposals about novel research<br>results, lessons learned from practical experience in an industrial or<br>educational setting, and even new insights on old ideas. We welcome<br>and encourage submissions that apply to any dynamic functional<br>language, especially those that can be considered a Scheme: from<br>strict subsets of RnRS to other "Scheme" implementations, to Racket,<br>to Lisp dialects including Clojure, Emacs Lisp, Common Lisp, to<br>functional languages with continuations and/or macros (or extended to<br>have them) such as Dylan, ECMAScript, Hop, Lua, Scala, Rust, etc. The<br>elegance of the paper and the relevance of its topic to the interests<br>of Schemers will matter more than the surface syntax of the examples<br>used.<br><br>* Topics<br><br>Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):<br><br>- Interaction: program-development environments, debugging, testing,<br> refactoring<br>- Implementation: interpreters, compilers, tools, garbage collectors,<br> benchmarks<br>- Extension: macros, hygiene, domain-specific languages, reflection,<br> and how such extension affects interaction<br>- Expression: control, modularity, ad hoc and parametric polymorphism,<br> types, aspects, ownership models, concurrency, distribution,<br> parallelism, non-determinism, probabilism, and other programming<br> paradigms<br>- Integration: build tools, deployment, interoperation with other<br> languages and systems<br>- Formal semantics: theory, analyses and transformations, partial<br> evaluation<br>- Human factors: past, present and future history, evolution and<br> sociology of the language Scheme, its standard and its dialects<br>- Education: approaches, experiences, curricula<br>- Applications: industrial uses of Scheme<br>- Scheme pearls: elegant, instructive uses of Scheme<br><br>* Important Dates<br><br>- Submission deadline is Thursday July 17, 2025.<br>- Authors will be notified by Monday August 11, 2025.<br>- Camera-ready versions are due Monday August 25, 2025.<br>- Workshop will be held in Singapore on Thursday October 16, 2025.<br><br>All deadlines are 23:59 UTC-12, anywhere on Earth.<br><br>* Submission Information<br><br>We welcome the following kinds of submissions.<br><br>- Full papers and experience reports: 5-12 pages. Accepted<br> submissions will be included in the proceedings.<br><br>- Position papers: 2-4 pages. Authors may choose whether to<br> publish their paper in the proceedings.<br><br>- Lightning talks: 1 page. Talk abstracts will not be included in<br> the proceedings.<br><br>All submissions should use the new ‘acmart’ format and the<br>two-column ‘sigplan’ subformat (not to be confused with the<br>one-column ‘acmsmall’ subformat). Please use the anonymous and<br>review options to obscure author information and enable line numbers. <br>The page limits do not include references or optional appendices.<br><br>Authors are encouraged to publish any code associated to their papers<br>under an open source license, so that reviewers may try the code and<br>verify the claims.<br><br>Proceedings will be published in the ACM Digital Library.<br><br>Please submit papers through the workshop's HotCRP site <br>(<a href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://scheme2025.hotcrp.com/__;!!IBzWLUs!VxyiJMm7TV4UgRg421X9S61ytu2vQiTgAR8nWMM57g-oH_fB4CYCCPNLe1FGfpOVNIFaY4GLmFzcEpL29rXre5ZDMoLCpNu8$" target="_blank">https://scheme2025.hotcrp.com/</a>).<br><br>* Lightweight double-blind reviewing<br><br>Scheme 2025 will use lightweight double-blind reviewing. Submitted<br>papers must omit author names and institutions and reference the<br>authors’ own related work in the third person (e.g., not “we build on<br>our previous work…” but rather “we build on the work of…”).<br><br>The purpose is to help the reviewers come to an initial judgment<br>about the paper without bias, not to make it impossible for them to<br>discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing should be done in<br>the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of<br>reviewing the paper more difficult (e.g., important background<br>references should not be omitted or anonymized).<br><br>* Workshop Organization<br><br>Program Co-Chairs:<br>William E. Byrd (University of Alabama at Birmingham, United States)<br>Youyou Cong (Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan)<br><br>Local Arrangements Chair:<br>Olivier Danvy (Yale-NUS College, Singapore)<br><br>Program Committee:<br>Robert Glück (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)<br>Ben Greenman (University of Utah, United States)<br>Daniel Hillerström (Category Labs, United States)<br>Paulette Koronkevich (University of British Columbia, Canada)<br>Keisuke Nakano (Tohoku University, Japan)<br>Olin Shivers (Northeastern University, United States)<br>Marco T. Morazan (Seton Hall University, United States)<br></div>
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