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Getting Started
It seems to me that LtU has many new readers and contributors since moving to the new site. That's great!
Yet it seems to me that the situation right now is that LtU has readers with very different backgrounds, among them many readers who haven't studied PL formally. Others come from academia, and study PL theory for a living. Since we have such a lively community it occured to me to start a thread for advice on where to begin aimed at those who haven't studied PL theory, yet want to follow the papers and books we discuss. So the question, mostly directed at old timers, is to which resources would you send a friend asking for advice on learning about the theoretical study of programming languages? P.S The early LtU archives may be helpful, since I used LtU to organize and collect the papers I read when I began my studies in the field. By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-21 11:45 | General | Teaching & Learning | 65 comments | other blogs | 385484 reads
Principles of Program Analysis
To coincide with the reprinting of Principles of Program Analysis by
Flemming Nielson, Hanne Riis Nielson and Chris Hankin the authors launched a new web page containing lecture slides and other supplementary material.
The lecture slides cover things like data flow analysis, control flow analysis and abstract interpretation. By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-20 14:41 | Theory | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 7945 reads
OOP Is Much Better in Theory Than in Practice
An critique of OOP. The article is about OOP as a SE/design approach and doesn't directly attack the issue from a PL angle, but it might still interest LtU readers.
From a PL point of view, I would have chnaged the title to: OOP Is Much Better in Theory Than in Practice, (And the Theory Isn't too Good anyway). By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-20 09:01 | OOP | Software Engineering | 95 comments | other blogs | 39551 reads
An Introduction to Jython
Getting sick of Python posts by now? Sorry...
A large part of this presentation consists of a series of code examples showing how something is done in pure Java versus a Jython version. A nice illustration of the differences between the languages (did anyone say explicit static typing?) and about their different abstraction facilities and domain specific abstractions (e.g., builtin dictionaries and list comprehensions). Analyzing these examples may be fun exercise idea for those of us teaching PL courses. By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-19 14:24 | Implementation | Python | Teaching & Learning | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 6405 reads
Normal-order direct-style beta-evaluator with syntax-rules, and the repeated applications of call/cc
Oleg's presentation at the workshop in honor of Daniel Friedman is great fun as usual.
The topic of repeated applications of call/cc has been mentioned on LtU previously, a few years
ago. New this time: the full and correct beta-normalizer written as a
direct-style syntax-rule. The normalizer implements calculus of
explicit substitutions. The talk presents probably the shortest (and
the fastest) normal-order beta-normalizer as a (stand-alone) Scheme
macro. Another new feature is the discussion of self-applications of
delimited continuation operators. The talk mentions incidentally that
shift, control, shift0 and other, less-delimited control operators are the members of the same family: gshift/greset.
Hot stuff. By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-19 13:07 | Lambda Calculus | Meta-Programming | Semantics | 1 comment | other blogs | 8493 reads
Python "Monkey Typing"
I guess the record wouldn't be complete without mentioning this proposal,
This PEP proposes an extension to "duck typing" called "monkey typing", that preserves most of the benefits of duck typing, while adding new features to enhance inter-library and inter-framework compatibility. The name comes from the saying, "Monkey see, monkey do", because monkey typing works by stating how one object type may mimic specific behaviors of another object type. By Ehud Lamm at 2005-01-19 13:02 | Python | Type Theory | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 8768 reads
Advanced Topics in Types and Programming LanguagesThe long awaited sequel to Types and Programming Languages by Benjamin Pierce is out! Check it out here: It is available from amazon. I'm certainly getting a copy. TAPL was great! XPath, XML, Python
A discussion with some interesting views and perspective.
Here you'll find code snipptes showing the API of the various libraries (all of them used to solve the same programming task), and comments about the behaviour of each of the libraries. I am not sure if this item should be categorized as being pro-libraries, pro-a big standard libary, or pro-builtin language support for XML. You decide. Process algebra needs proof methodologyIt's widely appreciated that knowing that a distributed system or protocol behaves correctly is generally hard, and that process algebras provide useful formalisms for reasoning about these. Less appreciated is how hard it is to turn informal correctness proofs into formal proofs using process algebras. Process algebra needs proof methodology (Fokkink, Groote & Reniers), an introductory article published a year ago in the Bulletin of the EATCS, provides a nice introduction to the problem of making process algebras more tractable for correctness reasoning, using Tanenbaum's sliding window protocol as a running example of a surprisingly hard-to-formalise proof. Perhaps as interesting for LtU readers is that the article comes from the negelected "third" approach to process algebra (after CCS and CSP), namely the Algebra of Communicating Processes of Bergstra and Klop. By Charles A Stewart at 2005-01-16 15:46 | Parallel/Distributed | 2 comments | other blogs | 7194 reads
Commentary on Standard MLUnder the category of "what I'm up to", found the book by Milner and Tofte at the used bookstore over the weekend. On chapter 8 at the moment. I see that the Commentary book is online for those who haven't read it yet (last published in 1991, it's out of print). This book is the companion to the Definition of Standard ML, which defines SML in mathematical terms. The Commentary is a bit more approachable, but I must admit that I probably could use a "Commentary on the Commentary on Standard ML", to make the Commentary digestable. But then the two books are aimed at implementors of the language. Still, I managed to pick up some useful information on ML here and there. |
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