This volume contains the proceedings of the Third Conference on Functional Programming Languages and Computer Architecture held in Portland, Oregon, September 14-16, 1987. This conference was a successor to two highly successful conferences on the same topics held at Wentworth, New Hampshire, in October 1981 and in Nancy, in September 1985. Papers were solicited on all aspects of functional languages and particularly implementation techniques for functional programming languages and computer architectures to support the efficient execution of functional programs. The contributions collected in…mehr
This volume contains the proceedings of the Third Conference on Functional Programming Languages and Computer Architecture held in Portland, Oregon, September 14-16, 1987. This conference was a successor to two highly successful conferences on the same topics held at Wentworth, New Hampshire, in October 1981 and in Nancy, in September 1985. Papers were solicited on all aspects of functional languages and particularly implementation techniques for functional programming languages and computer architectures to support the efficient execution of functional programs. The contributions collected in this volume show that many issues regarding the implementation of Functional Programming Languages are now far better understood.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Control of parallelism in the Manchester dataflow machine.- The D-RISC-An architecture for use in multiprocessors.- Tim: A simple, lazy abstract machine to execute supercombinators.- The G-machine as a representation of stack semantics.- Categorical multi-combinators.- Evaluating functional programs on the flagship machine.- GRIP - a high-performance architecture for parallel graph reduction.- Concurrent garbage collection on stock hardware.- Matrix algebra and applicative programming.- Attribute grammars as a functional programming paradigm.- The planar topology of functional programs.- Functional programming with sets.- A theory for natural modelisation and implementation of functions with variable arity.- Pomset interpretations of parallel functional programs.- SIGNAL: A declarative language for synchronous programming of real-time systems.- Controlling the behaviour of functional language systems.- A standard ML compiler.- Performance polymorphism.- Mapping a single-assignment language onto the warp systolic array.- Clean - A language for functional graph rewriting.- Projections for strictness analysis.- Detecting sharing of partial applications in functional programs.- Finding fixed points in finite lattices.- Evaluation transformers - A model for the parallel evaluation of functional languages (extended abstract).
Control of parallelism in the Manchester dataflow machine.- The D-RISC-An architecture for use in multiprocessors.- Tim: A simple, lazy abstract machine to execute supercombinators.- The G-machine as a representation of stack semantics.- Categorical multi-combinators.- Evaluating functional programs on the flagship machine.- GRIP - a high-performance architecture for parallel graph reduction.- Concurrent garbage collection on stock hardware.- Matrix algebra and applicative programming.- Attribute grammars as a functional programming paradigm.- The planar topology of functional programs.- Functional programming with sets.- A theory for natural modelisation and implementation of functions with variable arity.- Pomset interpretations of parallel functional programs.- SIGNAL: A declarative language for synchronous programming of real-time systems.- Controlling the behaviour of functional language systems.- A standard ML compiler.- Performance polymorphism.- Mapping a single-assignment language onto the warp systolic array.- Clean - A language for functional graph rewriting.- Projections for strictness analysis.- Detecting sharing of partial applications in functional programs.- Finding fixed points in finite lattices.- Evaluation transformers - A model for the parallel evaluation of functional languages (extended abstract).
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