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Onward! 2016: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Eelco Visser, Emerson R. Murphy-Hill, Cristina V. Lopes:
2016 ACM International Symposium on New Ideas, New Paradigms, and Reflections on Programming and Software, Onward! 2016, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, November 2-4, 2016. ACM 2016, ISBN 978-1-4503-4076-2
Papers I
- Tim Marter, Paul Babucke, Philipp Lembken, Stefan Hanenberg:
Lightweight programming experiments without programmers and programs: an example study on the effect of similarity and number of object identifiers on the readability of source code using natural texts. 1-14 - Nicolás Cardozo:
Emergent software services. 15-28 - Kimio Kuramitsu:
Nez: practical open grammar language. 29-42 - Nevena Milojkovic, Oscar Nierstrasz:
Exploring cheap type inference heuristics in dynamically typed languages. 43-56
Papers II
- Niklas Fors, Görel Hedin:
Bloqqi: modular feature-based block diagram programming. 57-73 - Mehrdad Afshari, Zhendong Su:
Building white-box abstractions by program refinement. 74-81 - Heather Miller, Philipp Haller, Normen Müller, Jocelyn Boullier:
Function passing: a model for typed, distributed functional programming. 82-97 - Shir Yadid, Eran Yahav:
Extracting code from programming tutorial videos. 98-111
Papers III
- Matt McCutchen, Shachar Itzhaky, Daniel Jackson:
Object spreadsheets: a new computational model for end-user development of data-centric web applications. 112-127 - Andrei Chis, Tudor Gîrba, Juraj Kubelka, Oscar Nierstrasz, Stefan Reichhart, Aliaksei Syrel:
Moldable, context-aware searching with Spotter. 128-144
Papers IV
- Ivan Kuraj, Daniel Jackson:
Exploring the role of sequential computation in distributed systems: motivating a programming paradigm shift. 145-164 - Patrick Rein, Robert Hirschfeld, Marcel Taeumel:
Gramada: immediacy in programming language development. 165-179 - Soumya Indela, Mukul Kulkarni, Kartik Nayak, Tudor Dumitras:
Helping Johnny encrypt: toward semantic interfaces for cryptographic frameworks. 180-196 - Meital Zilberstein, Eran Yahav:
Leveraging a corpus of natural language descriptions for program similarity. 197-211
Essays I
- Johannes Emerich:
How are programs found? speculating about language ergonomics with Curry-Howard. 212-223 - James Noble, Andrew P. Black, Kim B. Bruce, Michael Homer, Mark S. Miller:
The left hand of equals. 224-237
Essays II
- Daniel Ingalls, Tim Felgentreff, Robert Hirschfeld, Robert Krahn, Jens Lincke, Marko Röder, Antero Taivalsaari, Tommi Mikkonen:
A world of active objects for work and play: the first ten years of lively. 238-249 - Richard P. Gabriel:
in the control room of the banquet. 250-268
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