DEADLINE: 26 June 2021 (Anywhere on Earth)
WEBSITE: https://icfp21.sigplan.org/home/minikanren-2021
LOCATION: Virtual (co-located with ICFP 2021: https://icfp21.sigplan.org)
DATE: 26 August 2021

The third miniKanren and Relational Programming Workshop is calling for 
submissions.

Full papers are due: 26 June 2021
Authors will be notified: 12 July 2021
Camera-ready versions are due: 21 July 2021
All deadlines are "Anywhere on Earth" (23:59 UTC-12).

Submission page: https://minikanren-2021.hotcrp.com/


The miniKanren and Relational Programming Workshop is a new workshop for 
the miniKanren family of relational (pure constraint logic programming) 
languages: miniKanren, microKanren, core.logic, OCanren, Guanxi, etc. The 
workshop solicits papers and talks on the design, implementation, and 
application of miniKanren-like languages. A major goal of the workshop is 
to bring together researchers, implementors, and users from the miniKanren 
community, and to share expertise and techniques for relational 
programming. Another goal for the workshop is to push the state of the art 
of relational programming — for example, by developing new techniques for 
writing interpreters, type inferencers, theorem provers, abstract 
interpreters, CAD tools, and other interesting programs as relations, which 
are capable of being “run backward,” performing synthesis, etc.

We want to encourage all kinds of submissions. We expect short papers as 
well as longer papers. As a rough guideline, with the new ACM format, a 
short paper would be 2 to 7 pages and a long paper 8 to 25 pages.


Submission Information:

Paper submissions must use the format “acmart” and its sub-format “sigplan” 
(note the change from last year). 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).

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

Submissions must be anonymized and should not contain any identifying 
information. It is recommended to use the “review” option when submitting a 
paper; this option enables line numbers for easy reference in reviews.


Reviewing Process:

We will use lightweight-double-blind reviewing. Submitted papers must omit 
author names and institutions and reference the authors’ own related work 
in the third person (e.g., not “we build on our previous work…” but rather 
“we build on the work of...”).

The purpose is to help the reviewers come to an initial judgement about the 
paper without bias, not to make it impossible for them to discover the 
authors if they were to try. Nothing should be done in the name of 
anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the 
paper more difficult (e.g., important background references should not be 
omitted or anonymized).


Proceedings will be published as a Technical Report at the University of 
Toronto.

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,
Gregory Rosenblatt and Lisa Zhang, Co-Chairs

Program Committee:
Michael Ballantyne, Northeastern University
Molly Feldman, Williams College
Atsushi Igarashi, Kyoto University
Andy Keep, Facebook
Dmitrii Kosarev, JetBrains Research, Saint Petersburg State University
Rebecca Swords, Unaffiliated
Dann Toliver, Toda

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