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SIGPLAN Symposium on Interpreters and Interpretive Techniques 1987: St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
- Richard L. Wexelblat:
Proceedings of the Symposium on Interpreters and Interpretive Techniques, 1987, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA, June 24 - 26, 1987. ACM 1987, ISBN 0-89791-235-7 - Cathy May:
Mimic: a fast system/370 simulator. 1-13 - Miquel Huguet, Tomás Lang, Yuval Tamir:
A block-and-actions generator as an alternative to a simulator for collecting architecture measurements. 14-25 - Stan Shebs, Robert R. Kessler:
Automatic design and implementation of language data types. 26-37 - Raghu Karinthi, Mark D. Weiser:
Incremental re-execution of programs. 38-44 - David Notkin, William G. Griswold:
Enhancement through extension: the extension interpreter. 45-55 - Robert S. Sutor, Richard D. Jenks:
The type inference and coercion facilities in the scratchpad II interpreter. 56-63 - Arch Douglas Robison:
The Illinois functional programming interpreter. 64-73 - Richard C. Waters:
Efficient interpretation of synchronizable series expressions. 74-85 - Antony A. Faustini, William W. Wadge:
An eductive interpreter for Lucid. 86-91 - Rolf Bahlke, Bernhard Moritz, Gregor Snelting:
A generator for language-specific debugging systems. 92-101 - Stephen K. Skedzielewski, Robert Kim Yates, R. R. Oldehoeft:
DI: an interactive debugging interpreter for applicative languages. 102-112 - Benjamin B. Chase, Robert T. Hood:
Selective interpretation as a technique for debugging computationally intensive programs. 113-124 - Andreas Krall:
Implementation of a high-speed Prolog interpreter. 125-131 - Jonas Barklund:
Efficient interpretation of Prolog programs. 132-137 - Janalee O'Bagy, Ralph E. Griswold:
A recursive interpreter for the Icon programming language. 138-149 - Thomas Pittman:
Two-level hybrid interpreter/native code execution for combined space-time program efficiency. 150-152 - Kai Koskimies, Jukka Paakki:
TOOLS: a unifying approach to object-oriented language interpretation. 153-164 - Gregory F. Johnson:
GL-a denotational testbed with continuations and partial continuations as first-class objects. 165-176 - A. Jefferson Offutt, K. N. King:
A Fortran 77 interpreter for mutation analysis. 177-188 - Jack W. Davidson, Joseph V. Gresh:
Cint: a RISC interpreter for the C programming language. 189-198 - James R. Cordy, T. C. Nicholas Graham:
Design of an interpretive environment for Turing. 199-204 - Henry Harr, Martha W. Evens, James Sprowl:
Interpreting ABF - a language for document construction. 205-213 - Hans-Juergen Boehm:
Constructive real interpretation of numerical programs. 214-221 - Christopher F. Clark:
The JADE interpreter: a RISC interpreter for syntax directed editing. 222-228 - J. Eliot B. Moss:
Managing stack frames in Smalltalk. 229-240 - Olivier Danvy:
Memory allocation and higher-order functions. 241-252 - Bernard Lang, Francis Dupont:
Incremental incrementally compacting garbage collection. 253-263 - J. Dana Eckart, Richard J. LeBlanc:
Distributed garbage collection. 264-273 - David Gelernter, Suresh Jagannathan, Thomas London:
Parallelism, persistence and meta-cleanliness in the symmetric Lisp interpreter. 274-282 - Phil Kearns, Chris Cipriani, Mitzi Freeman:
CCAL: An interpreted language for experimentation in concurrent control. 283-291
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