Hello,

Thank you for your attention, and my apologies for any duplication you 
receive. Please find below the Call for Papers for the *2020 Scheme and 
Functional Programming Workshop*. We look forward to your submissions.


*Call for Papers*The 2020 Scheme and Functional Programming Workshop is 
calling for submissions.

We invite high-quality papers about novel research results, lessons learned 
from practical experience in industrial or educational setting, and even 
new insights on old ideas. We welcome and encourage submissions that apply 
to any language that can be considered Scheme: from strict subsets of RnRS 
to other “Scheme” implementations, to Racket, to Lisp dialects including 
*Clojure*, Emacs Lisp, Common Lisp, to functional languages with 
continuations and/or macros (or extended to have them) such as Dylan, 
ECMAScript, Hop, Lua, Scala, Rust, etc. The elegance of the paper and the 
relevance of its topic to the interests of Schemers will matter more than 
the surface syntax of the examples used. Topics of interest include (but 
are not limited to):

Interaction: program-development environments, debugging, testing, 
refactoring
Implementation: interpreters, compilers, tools, garbage collectors, 
benchmarks
Extension: macros, hygiene, domain-specific languages, reflection, and how 
such extension affects interaction.
Expression: control, modularity, ad hoc and parametric polymorphism, types, 
aspects, ownership models, concurrency, distribution, parallelism, 
non-determinism, probabilism, and other programming paradigms
Integration: build tools, deployment, interoperation with other languages 
and systems
Formal semantics: Theory, analyses and transformations, partial evaluation
Human Factors: Past, present and future history, evolution and sociology of 
the language Scheme, its standard and its dialects
Education: approaches, experiences, curricula
Applications: industrial uses of Scheme
Scheme pearls: elegant, instructive uses of Scheme


*Important dates*Submission deadline is 15 May 2020.
Authors will be notified by 12 June 2020.
Camera-ready versions are due 30 June 2020.
All deadlines are (23:59 UTC-12), “Anywhere on Earth”.
Submission Information
Paper submissions must use the format acmart and its sub-format acmlarge. 
They must be in PDF, printable in black and white on US Letter size. 
Microsoft Word and LaTeX templates for this format are available at:

http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/

This format is in line with ACM conferences (such as ICFP with which we are 
colocated). It is recommended to use the review option when submitting a 
paper; this option enables line numbers for easy reference in reviews.

We want to encourage all kinds of submissions, including full papers, 
experience reports and lightning talks. Papers and experience reports are 
limited to 14 pages, but we encourage submitting smaller papers. Lightning 
talks are limited to 192 words. Each accepted paper and report will be 
presented by its authors in a 25 minute slot including Q&A. Each accepted 
lightning talk will be presented by its authors in a 5 minute slot, 
followed by 5 minutes of Q&A.

The size limits above exclude references and any optional appendices. There 
are no size limits on appendices, but the papers should stand without the 
need to read them, and reviewers are not required to read them.

Authors are encouraged to publish any code associated to their papers under 
an open source license, so that reviewers may try the code and verify the 
claims.

Proceedings will be printed as a Technical Report at the University of 
Michigan and uploaded to arXiv.org.

Publication of a paper at this workshop is not intended to replace 
conference or journal publication, and does not preclude re-publication of 
a more complete or finished version of the paper at some later conference 
or in a journal.

Sincerely,


Jason Hemann, Northeastern University





*Organizing Committee*Michael D. Adams (Program Co-Chair), University of 
Michigan
Baptiste Saleil (Program Co-Chair), IBM Canada
Jason Hemann (Publicity Chair), Northeastern University



*Program Committee*Michael D. Adams (Program Co-Chair), University of 
Michigan
Baptiste Saleil (Program Co-Chair), IBM Canada
Maxime Chevalier-Boisvert, Université de Montréal
Ryan Culpepper, Czech Technical University
Kimball Germane, University of Utah
Yukiyoshi Kameyama, University of Tsukuba
Andy Keep, Cisco Systems, Inc
Julien Pagès, Université de Montréal
Alexey Radul



*Steering Committee*Will Byrd, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Will Clinger, The Larceny Project
Marc Feeley, Université de Montréal
Dan Friedman, Indiana University
Olin Shivers, Northeastern University

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