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SIGPLAN

 
Wikipedia: SIGPLAN

SIGPLAN is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on programming languages.

Contents

Conferences

Newsletters

Awards

Programming Languages Achievement Award:

SIGPLAN Doctoral Dissertation Award:

  • 2008: Michael Bond and Viktor Vafeiadis
  • 2007: Swarat Chaudhuri
  • 2006: Xiangyu Zhang
  • 2005: Sumit Gulwani
  • 2003: Godmar Back
  • 2002: Michael Hicks
  • 2001: Rastislav Bodik

SIGPLAN Distinguished Service Award:

  • 2009: Mamdouh Ibrahim
  • 2008: Michael Burke
  • 2007: Linda M. Northrop
  • 2006: Hans Boehm
  • 2005: no award made
  • 2004: Ron Cytron
  • 2003: Mary Lou Soffa
  • 2002: Andrew Appel
  • 2001: Barbara Ryder
  • 2000: David Wise
  • 1999: Loren Meissner
  • 1998: Brent Hailpern
  • 1997: Jan Lee and Jean E. Sammet
  • 1996: Dick Wexelblat and John Richards

Most Influential PLDI Paper Award:

  • 2009 (for 1999): A Fast Fourier Transform Compiler, Matteo Frigo
  • 2008 (for 1998): The implementation of the Cilk-5 multithreaded language, Matteo Frigo, Charles E. Leiserson, Keith H. Randall
  • 2007 (for 1997): Exploiting hardware performance counters with flow and context sensitive profiling, Glenn Ammons, Thomas Ball, and James R. Larus
  • 2006 (for 1996): TIL: A Type-Directed Optimizing Compiler for ML, David Tarditi, Greg Morrisett, Perry Cheng, Christopher Stone, Robert Harper, and Peter Lee
  • 2005 (for 1995): Selective Specialization for Object-Oriented Languages, Jeffrey Dean, Craig Chambers, and David Grove
  • 2004 (for 1994): ATOM: a system for building customized program analysis tools, Amitabh Srivastava and Alan Eustace
  • 2003 (for 1993): Space Efficient Conservative Garbage Collection, Hans Boehm
  • 2002 (for 1992): Lazy Code Motion, Jens Knoop, Oliver Rüthing, Bernhard Steffen
  • 2001 (for 1991): A data locality optimizing algorithm, Michael E. Wolf and Monica S. Lam
  • 2000 (for 1990): Profile guided code positioning, Karl Pettis and Robert C. Hansen

Most Influential POPL Paper Award

  • 2009 (for 1999): JFlow: Practical Mostly-Static Information Flow Control, Andrew C. Myers
  • 2008 (for 1998): From System F to Typed Assembly Language, Greg Morrisett, David Walker, Karl Crary, and Neal Glew
  • 2007 (for 1997): Proof-carrying Code, George Necula
  • 2006 (for 1996): Points-to Analysis in Almost Linear Time, Bjarne Steensgaard
  • 2005 (for 1995): A Language with Distributed Scope, Luca Cardelli
  • 2004 (for 1994): Implementation of the Typed Call-by-Value lambda-calculus using a Stack of Regions, Mads Tofte and Jean-Pierre Talpin
  • 2003 (for 1993): Imperative functional programming, Simon Peyton Jones and Philip Wadler

Most Influential OOPSLA Paper Award

  • 2009 (for 1999): Implementing Jalapeño in Java, Bowen Alpern, C. R. Attanasio, John J. Barton, Anthony Cocchi, Susan Flynn Hummel, Derek Lieber, Ton Ngo, Mark Mergen, Janice C. Shepherd, and Stephen Smith
  • 2008 (for 1998): Ownership Types for Flexible Alias Protection, David G. Clarke, John M. Potter, and James Noble
  • 2007 (for 1997): Call Graph Construction in Object-Oriented Languages, David Grove, Greg DeFouw, Jeffrey Dean, and Craig Chambers
  • 2006 (for 1986-1996):
    • Subject Oriented Programming: A Critique of Pure Objects, William Harrison and Harold Ossher
    • Concepts and Experiments in Computational Reflection, Pattie Maes
    • Self: The Power of Simplicity, David Ungar and Randall B. Smith

Most Influential ICFP Paper Award

  • 2008 (for 1998): Cayenne — a language with dependent types, Lennart Augustsson
  • 2007 (for 1997): Functional Reactive Animation, Conal Elliott and Paul Hudak
  • 2006 (for 1996): Optimality and inefficiency: what isn't a cost model of the lambda calculus?, Julia L. Lawall and Harry G. Mairson

External links


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