update'
[phd-thesis.git] / other.bib
1
2 @mastersthesis{crooijmans_reducing_2021,
3 address = {Nijmegen},
4 title = {Reducing the {Power} {Consumption} of {IoT} {Devices} in {Task}-{Oriented} {Programming}},
5 language = {en},
6 school = {Radboud University},
7 author = {Crooijmans, Sjoerd},
8 month = jul,
9 year = {2021},
10 file = {Crooijmans - 2021 - Reducing the Power Consumption of IoT Devices in T.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/98LY9YHH/Crooijmans - 2021 - Reducing the Power Consumption of IoT Devices in T.pdf:application/pdf},
11 }
12
13 @inproceedings{plasmeijer_task-oriented_2012,
14 address = {New York, NY, USA},
15 series = {{PPDP} '12},
16 title = {Task-{Oriented} {Programming} in a {Pure} {Functional} {Language}},
17 isbn = {978-1-4503-1522-7},
18 doi = {10.1145/2370776.2370801},
19 abstract = {Task-Oriented Programming (TOP) is a novel programming paradigm for the construction of distributed systems where users work together on the internet. When multiple users collaborate, they need to interact with each other frequently. TOP supports the definition of tasks that react to the progress made by others. With TOP, complex multi-user interactions can be programmed in a declarative style just by defining the tasks that have to be accomplished, thus eliminating the need to worry about the implementation detail that commonly frustrates the development of applications for this domain. TOP builds on four core concepts: tasks that represent computations or work to do which have an observable value that may change over time, data sharing enabling tasks to observe each other while the work is in progress, generic type driven generation of user interaction, and special combinators for sequential and parallel task composition. The semantics of these core concepts is defined in this paper. As an example we present the iTask3 framework, which embeds TOP in the functional programming language Clean.},
20 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 14th {Symposium} on {Principles} and {Practice} of {Declarative} {Programming}},
21 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
22 author = {Plasmeijer, Rinus and Lijnse, Bas and Michels, Steffen and Achten, Peter and Koopman, Pieter},
23 year = {2012},
24 note = {event-place: Leuven, Belgium},
25 keywords = {clean, task-oriented programming},
26 pages = {195--206},
27 file = {103802.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ZE6A65AW/103802.pdf:application/pdf},
28 }
29
30 @inproceedings{brus_clean_1987,
31 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
32 title = {Clean — {A} language for functional graph rewriting},
33 isbn = {978-3-540-47879-9},
34 abstract = {Clean is an experimental language for specifying functional computations in terms of graph rewriting. It is based on an extension of Term Rewriting Systems (TRS) in which the terms are replaced by graphs. Such a Graph Rewriting System (GRS) consists of a, possibly cyclic, directed graph, called the data graph and graph rewrite rules which specify how this data graph may be rewritten. Clean is designed to provide a firm base for functional programming. In particular, Clean is suitable as an intermediate language between functional languages and (parallel) target machine architectures. A sequential implementation of Clean on a conventional machine is described and its performance is compared with other systems. The results show that Clean can be efficiently implemented.},
35 booktitle = {Functional {Programming} {Languages} and {Computer} {Architecture}},
36 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
37 author = {Brus, T. H. and van Eekelen, M. C. J. D. and van Leer, M. O. and Plasmeijer, M. J.},
38 editor = {Kahn, Gilles},
39 year = {1987},
40 pages = {364--384},
41 file = {brut87-Clean.ps.gz:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/T2QATWIE/brut87-Clean.ps.gz:application/gzip},
42 }
43
44 @misc{bolingbroke_constraint_2011,
45 title = {Constraint {Kinds} for {GHC}},
46 url = {http://blog.omega-prime.co.uk/2011/09/10/constraint-kinds-for-ghc/},
47 urldate = {2021-06-09},
48 journal = {:: (Bloggable a) ={\textgreater} a -{\textgreater} IO ()},
49 author = {Bolingbroke, Max},
50 month = sep,
51 year = {2011},
52 file = {Constraint Kinds for GHC:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/R6RL79K7/constraint-kinds-for-ghc.html:text/html},
53 }
54
55 @inproceedings{fegaras_revisiting_1996,
56 address = {New York, NY, USA},
57 series = {{POPL} '96},
58 title = {Revisiting {Catamorphisms} over {Datatypes} with {Embedded} {Functions} (or, {Programs} from {Outer} {Space})},
59 isbn = {0-89791-769-3},
60 doi = {10.1145/237721.237792},
61 abstract = {We revisit the work of Paterson and of Meijer \& Hutton, which describes how to construct catamorphisms for recursive datatype definitions that embed contravariant occurrences of the type being defined. Their construction requires, for each catamorphism, the definition of an anamorphism that has an inverse-like relationship to that catamorphism. We present an alternative construction, which replaces the stringent requirement that an inverse anamorphism be defined for each catamorphism with a more lenient restriction. The resulting construction has a more efficient implementation than that of Paterson, Meijer, and Hutton and the relevant restriction can be enforced by a Hindley-Milner type inference algorithm. We provide numerous examples illustrating our method.},
62 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 23rd {ACM} {SIGPLAN}-{SIGACT} {Symposium} on {Principles} of {Programming} {Languages}},
63 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
64 author = {Fegaras, Leonidas and Sheard, Tim},
65 year = {1996},
66 note = {event-place: St. Petersburg Beach, Florida, USA},
67 pages = {284--294},
68 file = {Fegaras and Sheard - 1996 - Revisiting Catamorphisms over Datatypes with Embed.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/WCSRVWGC/Fegaras and Sheard - 1996 - Revisiting Catamorphisms over Datatypes with Embed.pdf:application/pdf},
69 }
70
71 @inproceedings{pfenning_higher-order_1988,
72 address = {New York, NY, USA},
73 series = {{PLDI} '88},
74 title = {Higher-{Order} {Abstract} {Syntax}},
75 isbn = {0-89791-269-1},
76 doi = {10.1145/53990.54010},
77 abstract = {We describe motivation, design, use, and implementation of higher-order abstract syntax as a central representation for programs, formulas, rules, and other syntactic objects in program manipulation and other formal systems where matching and substitution or unification are central operations. Higher-order abstract syntax incorporates name binding information in a uniform and language generic way. Thus it acts as a powerful link integrating diverse tools in such formal environments. We have implemented higher-order abstract syntax, a supporting matching and unification algorithm, and some clients in Common Lisp in the framework of the Ergo project at Carnegie Mellon University.},
78 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {ACM} {SIGPLAN} 1988 {Conference} on {Programming} {Language} {Design} and {Implementation}},
79 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
80 author = {Pfenning, F. and Elliott, C.},
81 year = {1988},
82 note = {event-place: Atlanta, Georgia, USA},
83 pages = {199--208},
84 file = {Pfenning and Elliott - 1988 - Higher-Order Abstract Syntax.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/2HSRWURK/Pfenning and Elliott - 1988 - Higher-Order Abstract Syntax.pdf:application/pdf},
85 }
86
87 @inproceedings{chlipala_parametric_2008,
88 address = {New York, NY, USA},
89 series = {{ICFP} '08},
90 title = {Parametric {Higher}-{Order} {Abstract} {Syntax} for {Mechanized} {Semantics}},
91 isbn = {978-1-59593-919-7},
92 doi = {10.1145/1411204.1411226},
93 abstract = {We present parametric higher-order abstract syntax (PHOAS), a new approach to formalizing the syntax of programming languages in computer proof assistants based on type theory. Like higher-order abstract syntax (HOAS), PHOAS uses the meta language's binding constructs to represent the object language's binding constructs. Unlike HOAS, PHOAS types are definable in general-purpose type theories that support traditional functional programming, like Coq's Calculus of Inductive Constructions. We walk through how Coq can be used to develop certified, executable program transformations over several statically-typed functional programming languages formalized with PHOAS; that is, each transformation has a machine-checked proof of type preservation and semantic preservation. Our examples include CPS translation and closure conversion for simply-typed lambda calculus, CPS translation for System F, and translation from a language with ML-style pattern matching to a simpler language with no variable-arity binding constructs. By avoiding the syntactic hassle associated with first-order representation techniques, we achieve a very high degree of proof automation.},
94 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Conference} on {Functional} {Programming}},
95 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
96 author = {Chlipala, Adam},
97 year = {2008},
98 note = {event-place: Victoria, BC, Canada},
99 keywords = {compiler verification, dependent types, interactive proof assistants, type-theoretic semantics},
100 pages = {143--156},
101 file = {Chlipala - 2008 - Parametric Higher-Order Abstract Syntax for Mechan.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/DZ33DAMU/Chlipala - 2008 - Parametric Higher-Order Abstract Syntax for Mechan.pdf:application/pdf},
102 }
103
104 @incollection{reynolds_user-defined_1978,
105 address = {New York, NY},
106 title = {User-{Defined} {Types} and {Procedural} {Data} {Structures} as {Complementary} {Approaches} to {Data} {Abstraction}},
107 isbn = {978-1-4612-6315-9},
108 abstract = {User-defined types (or modes) and procedural (or functional) data structures are complementary methods for data abstraction, each providing a capability lacked by the other. With user-defined types, all information about the representation of a particular kind of data is centralized in a type definition and hidden from the rest of the program. With procedural data structures, each part of the program which creates data can specify its own representation, independently of any representations used elsewhere for the same kind of data. However, this decentralization of the description of data is achieved at the cost of prohibiting primitive operations from accessing the representations of more than one data item. The contrast between these approaches is illustrated by a simple example.},
109 booktitle = {Programming {Methodology}: {A} {Collection} of {Articles} by {Members} of {IFIP} {WG2}.3},
110 publisher = {Springer New York},
111 author = {Reynolds, John C.},
112 editor = {Gries, David},
113 year = {1978},
114 doi = {10.1007/978-1-4612-6315-9_22},
115 pages = {309--317},
116 file = {Reynolds - 1978 - User-Defined Types and Procedural Data Structures .pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ASXE73U2/Reynolds - 1978 - User-Defined Types and Procedural Data Structures .pdf:application/pdf},
117 }
118
119 @misc{ghc_team_ghc_2021,
120 title = {{GHC} {User}’s {Guide} {Documentation}},
121 url = {https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/latest/docs/users_guide.pdf},
122 language = {English},
123 urldate = {2021-02-24},
124 publisher = {Release},
125 author = {GHC Team},
126 year = {2021},
127 file = {GHC Team - 2021 - GHC User’s Guide Documentation.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/87ZT5VXL/GHC Team - 2021 - GHC User’s Guide Documentation.pdf:application/pdf},
128 }
129
130 @misc{ghc_team_datadynamic_2021,
131 title = {Data.{Dynamic}},
132 url = {https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.14.1.0/docs/Data-Dynamic.html},
133 language = {English},
134 urldate = {2021-02-24},
135 publisher = {Release},
136 author = {GHC Team},
137 year = {2021},
138 }
139
140 @inproceedings{jeuring_polytypic_1996,
141 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
142 title = {Polytypic programming},
143 isbn = {978-3-540-70639-7},
144 abstract = {Many functions have to be written over and over again for different datatypes, either because datatypes change during the development of programs, or because functions with similar functionality are needed on different datatypes. Examples of such functions are pretty printers, debuggers, equality functions, unifiers, pattern matchers, rewriting functions, etc. Such functions are called polytypic functions. A polytypic function is a function that is defined by induction on the structure of user-defined datatypes. This paper introduces polytypic functions, and shows how to construct and reason about polytypic functions. A larger example is studied in detail: polytypic functions for term rewriting and for determining whether a collection of rewrite rules is normalising.},
145 booktitle = {Advanced {Functional} {Programming}},
146 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
147 author = {Jeuring, Johan and Jansson, Patrik},
148 editor = {Launchbury, John and Meijer, Erik and Sheard, Tim},
149 year = {1996},
150 pages = {68--114},
151 file = {Jeuring and Jansson - 1996 - Polytypic programming.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/SLC4G2IT/Jeuring and Jansson - 1996 - Polytypic programming.pdf:application/pdf},
152 }
153
154 @book{peyton_jones_haskell_2003,
155 address = {Cambridge},
156 title = {Haskell 98 language and libraries: the revised report},
157 isbn = {0-521 826144},
158 publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
159 editor = {Peyton Jones, Simon},
160 year = {2003},
161 file = {Peyton Jones - 2003 - Haskell 98 language and libraries the revised rep.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/UXEJT89I/Peyton Jones - 2003 - Haskell 98 language and libraries the revised rep.pdf:application/pdf},
162 }
163
164 @inproceedings{laufer_combining_1994,
165 title = {Combining type classes and existential types},
166 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {Latin} {American} {Informatic} {Conference} ({PANEL})},
167 publisher = {ITESM-CEM},
168 author = {Läufer, Konstantin},
169 year = {1994},
170 note = {event-place: Monterrey, Mexico},
171 file = {Läufer - COMBINING TYPE CLASSES AND EXISTENTIAL TYPES.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/KR4P9EHS/Läufer - COMBINING TYPE CLASSES AND EXISTENTIAL TYPES.pdf:application/pdf},
172 }
173
174 @techreport{hughes_restricted_1999,
175 address = {Paris},
176 title = {Restricted data types in {Haskell}},
177 number = {UU-CS-1999-28},
178 institution = {Department of Information and Computing Sciences, Utrecht University},
179 author = {Hughes, John},
180 year = {1999},
181 pages = {16},
182 file = {Hughes - 1999 - Restricted data types in Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/7ZE2MYWE/Hughes - 1999 - Restricted data types in Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
183 }
184
185 @article{najd_trees_2017,
186 title = {Trees that {Grow}},
187 volume = {23},
188 abstract = {We study the notion of extensibility in functional data types, as a new approach to the problem of decorating abstract syntax trees with additional information. We observed the need for such extensibility while redesigning the data types representing Haskell abstract syntax inside Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC). Specifically, we describe a programming idiom that exploits type-level functions to allow a particular form of extensibility. The approach scales to support existentials and generalised algebraic data types, and we can use pattern synonyms to make it convenient in practice.},
189 number = {1},
190 journal = {Journal of Universal Computer Science},
191 author = {Najd, Shayan and Peyton Jones, Simon},
192 month = jan,
193 year = {2017},
194 pages = {42--62},
195 file = {Najd and Jones - 2017 - Trees that Grow.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/HYQFTWZP/Najd and Jones - 2017 - Trees that Grow.pdf:application/pdf},
196 }
197
198 @inproceedings{loh_open_2006,
199 address = {New York, NY, USA},
200 series = {{PPDP} '06},
201 title = {Open {Data} {Types} and {Open} {Functions}},
202 isbn = {1-59593-388-3},
203 doi = {10.1145/1140335.1140352},
204 abstract = {The problem of supporting the modular extensibility of both data and functions in one programming language at the same time is known as the expression problem. Functional languages traditionally make it easy to add new functions, but extending data (adding new data constructors) requires modifying existing code. We present a semantically and syntactically lightweight variant of open data types and open functions as a solution to the expression problem in the Haskell language. Constructors of open data types and equations of open functions may appear scattered throughout a program with several modules. The intended semantics is as follows: the program should behave as if the data types and functions were closed, defined in one place. The order of function equations is determined by best-fit pattern matching, where a specific pattern takes precedence over an unspecific one. We show that our solution is applicable to the expression problem, generic programming, and exceptions. We sketch two implementations: a direct implementation of the semantics, and a scheme based on mutually recursive modules that permits separate compilation},
205 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 8th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Conference} on {Principles} and {Practice} of {Declarative} {Programming}},
206 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
207 author = {Löh, Andres and Hinze, Ralf},
208 year = {2006},
209 note = {event-place: Venice, Italy},
210 keywords = {functional programming, Haskell, expression problem, extensible data types, extensible exceptions, extensible functions, generic programming, mutually recursive modules},
211 pages = {133--144},
212 file = {OpenDatatypes.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/NEP9GZ9N/OpenDatatypes.pdf:application/pdf},
213 }
214
215 @inproceedings{hutton_fold_1998,
216 address = {New York, NY, USA},
217 series = {{ICFP} '98},
218 title = {Fold and {Unfold} for {Program} {Semantics}},
219 isbn = {1-58113-024-4},
220 doi = {10.1145/289423.289457},
221 abstract = {In this paper we explain how recursion operators can be used to structure and reason about program semantics within a functional language. In particular, we show how the recursion operator fold can be used to structure denotational semantics, how the dual recursion operator unfold can be used to structure operational semantics, and how algebraic properties of these operators can be used to reason about program semantics. The techniques are explained with the aid of two main examples, the first concerning arithmetic expressions, and the second concerning Milner's concurrent language CCS. The aim of the paper is to give functional programmers new insights into recursion operators, program semantics, and the relationships between them.},
222 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {Third} {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Conference} on {Functional} {Programming}},
223 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
224 author = {Hutton, Graham},
225 year = {1998},
226 note = {event-place: Baltimore, Maryland, USA},
227 pages = {280--288},
228 file = {Hutton - 1998 - Fold and unfold for program semantics.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YEB9K2TP/Hutton - 1998 - Fold and unfold for program semantics.pdf:application/pdf},
229 }
230
231 @article{abadi_dynamic_1991,
232 title = {Dynamic {Typing} in a {Statically} {Typed} {Language}},
233 volume = {13},
234 issn = {0164-0925},
235 doi = {10.1145/103135.103138},
236 abstract = {Statically typed programming languages allow earlier error checking, better enforcement of diciplined programming styles, and the generation of more efficient object code than languages where all type consistency checks are performed at run time. However, even in statically typed languages, there is often the need to deal with datawhose type cannot be determined at compile time. To handle such situations safely, we propose to add a type Dynamic whose values are pairs of a value v and a type tag T where v has the type denoted by T. Instances of Dynamic are built with an explicit tagging construct and inspected with a type safe typecase construct.This paper explores the syntax, operational semantics, and denotational semantics of a simple language that includes the type Dynamic. We give examples of how dynamically typed values can be used in programming. Then we discuss an operational semantics for our language and obtain a soundness theorem. We present two formulations of the denotational semantics of this language and relate them to the operational semantics. Finally, we consider the implications of polymorphism and some implementation issues.},
237 number = {2},
238 journal = {ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst.},
239 author = {Abadi, Martín and Cardelli, Luca and Pierce, Benjamin and Plotkin, Gordon},
240 month = apr,
241 year = {1991},
242 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
243 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
244 keywords = {theory},
245 pages = {237--268},
246 file = {Abadi et al. - 1991 - Dynamic typing in a statically typed language.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/CJSBG6X7/Abadi et al. - 1991 - Dynamic typing in a statically typed language.pdf:application/pdf},
247 }
248
249 @inproceedings{svenningsson_combining_2013,
250 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
251 title = {Combining {Deep} and {Shallow} {Embedding} for {EDSL}},
252 isbn = {978-3-642-40447-4},
253 doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-40447-4_2},
254 abstract = {When compiling embedded languages it is natural to use an abstract syntax tree to represent programs. This is known as a deep embedding and it is a rather cumbersome technique compared to other forms of embedding, typically leading to more code and being harder to extend. In shallow embeddings, language constructs are mapped directly to their semantics which yields more flexible and succinct implementations. But shallow embeddings are not well-suited for compiling embedded languages. We present a technique to combine deep and shallow embedding in the context of compiling embedded languages in order to provide the benefits of both techniques. In particular it helps keeping the deep embedding small and it makes extending the embedded language much easier. Our technique also has some unexpected but welcome knock-on effects. It provides fusion of functions to remove intermediate results for free without any additional effort. It also helps to give the embedded language a more natural programming interface.},
255 booktitle = {Trends in {Functional} {Programming}},
256 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
257 author = {Svenningsson, Josef and Axelsson, Emil},
258 editor = {Loidl, Hans-Wolfgang and Peña, Ricardo},
259 year = {2013},
260 pages = {21--36},
261 file = {svenningsson2013combining.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/NFBGZCZT/svenningsson2013combining.pdf:application/pdf},
262 }
263
264 @article{mitchell_abstract_1988,
265 title = {Abstract {Types} {Have} {Existential} {Type}},
266 volume = {10},
267 issn = {0164-0925},
268 doi = {10.1145/44501.45065},
269 abstract = {Abstract data type declarations appear in typed programming languages like Ada, Alphard, CLU and ML. This form of declaration binds a list of identifiers to a type with associated operations, a composite “value” we call a data algebra. We use a second-order typed lambda calculus SOL to show how data algebras may be given types, passed as parameters, and returned as results of function calls. In the process, we discuss the semantics of abstract data type declarations and review a connection between typed programming languages and constructive logic.},
270 number = {3},
271 journal = {ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst.},
272 author = {Mitchell, John C. and Plotkin, Gordon D.},
273 month = jul,
274 year = {1988},
275 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
276 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
277 pages = {470--502},
278 file = {Mitchell and Plotkin - 1988 - Abstract types have existential type.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/QXDE5H7C/Mitchell and Plotkin - 1988 - Abstract types have existential type.pdf:application/pdf},
279 }
280
281 @inproceedings{steenvoorden_tophat_2019,
282 address = {New York, NY, USA},
283 series = {{PPDP} '19},
284 title = {{TopHat}: {A} {Formal} {Foundation} for {Task}-{Oriented} {Programming}},
285 isbn = {978-1-4503-7249-7},
286 doi = {10.1145/3354166.3354182},
287 abstract = {Software that models how people work is omnipresent in today's society. Current languages and frameworks often focus on usability by non-programmers, sacrificing flexibility and high level abstraction. Task-oriented programming (TOP) is a programming paradigm that aims to provide the desired level of abstraction while still being expressive enough to describe real world collaboration. It prescribes a declarative programming style to specify multi-user workflows. Workflows can be higher-order. They communicate through typed values on a local and global level. Such specifications can be turned into interactive applications for different platforms, supporting collaboration during execution. TOP has been around for more than a decade, in the forms of iTasks and mTasks, which are tailored for real-world usability. So far, it has not been given a formalisation which is suitable for formal reasoning.In this paper we give a description of the TOP paradigm and then decompose its rich features into elementary language elements, which makes them suitable for formal treatment. We use the simply typed lambda-calculus, extended with pairs and references, as a base language. On top of this language, we develop TopHat, a language for modular interactive workflows. We describe TopHat by means of a layered semantics. These layers consist of multiple big-step evaluations on expressions, and two labelled transition systems, handling user inputs.With TopHat we prepare a way to formally reason about TOP languages and programs. This approach allows for comparison with other work in the field. We have implemented the semantic rules of TopHat in Haskell, and the task layer on top of the iTasks framework. This shows that our approach is feasible, and lets us demonstrate the concepts by means of illustrative case studies. TOP has been applied in projects with the Dutch coast guard, tax office, and navy. Our work matters because formal program verification is important for mission-critical software, especially for systems with concurrency.},
288 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 21st {International} {Symposium} on {Principles} and {Practice} of {Declarative} {Programming}},
289 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
290 author = {Steenvoorden, Tim and Naus, Nico and Klinik, Markus},
291 year = {2019},
292 note = {event-place: Porto, Portugal},
293 file = {Steenvoorden et al. - 2019 - TopHat A Formal Foundation for Task-Oriented Prog.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/W7HJ5MEF/Steenvoorden et al. - 2019 - TopHat A Formal Foundation for Task-Oriented Prog.pdf:application/pdf},
294 }
295
296 @inproceedings{yorgey_giving_2012,
297 address = {New York, NY, USA},
298 series = {{TLDI} '12},
299 title = {Giving {Haskell} a {Promotion}},
300 isbn = {978-1-4503-1120-5},
301 doi = {10.1145/2103786.2103795},
302 abstract = {Static type systems strive to be richly expressive while still being simple enough for programmers to use. We describe an experiment that enriches Haskell's kind system with two features promoted from its type system: data types and polymorphism. The new system has a very good power-to-weight ratio: it offers a significant improvement in expressiveness, but, by re-using concepts that programmers are already familiar with, the system is easy to understand and implement.},
303 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 8th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Types} in {Language} {Design} and {Implementation}},
304 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
305 author = {Yorgey, Brent A. and Weirich, Stephanie and Cretin, Julien and Peyton Jones, Simon and Vytiniotis, Dimitrios and Magalhães, José Pedro},
306 year = {2012},
307 note = {event-place: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA},
308 keywords = {haskell, kinds, polymorphism, promotion},
309 pages = {53--66},
310 file = {Yorgey et al. - 2012 - Giving Haskell a Promotion.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/7GTDGQ3I/Yorgey et al. - 2012 - Giving Haskell a Promotion.pdf:application/pdf},
311 }
312
313 @inproceedings{atkey_unembedding_2009,
314 address = {New York, NY, USA},
315 series = {Haskell '09},
316 title = {Unembedding {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}},
317 isbn = {978-1-60558-508-6},
318 doi = {10.1145/1596638.1596644},
319 abstract = {Higher-order abstract syntax provides a convenient way of embedding domain-specific languages, but is awkward to analyse and manipulate directly. We explore the boundaries of higher-order abstract syntax. Our key tool is the unembedding of embedded terms as de Bruijn terms, enabling intensional analysis. As part of our solution we present techniques for separating the definition of an embedded program from its interpretation, giving modular extensions of the embedded language, and different ways to encode the types of the embedded language.},
320 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2nd {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
321 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
322 author = {Atkey, Robert and Lindley, Sam and Yallop, Jeremy},
323 year = {2009},
324 note = {event-place: Edinburgh, Scotland},
325 keywords = {domain-specific languages, higher-order abstract syntax, type classes, unembedding},
326 pages = {37--48},
327 file = {Atkey et al. - 2009 - Unembedding Domain-Specific Languages.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/GVFRIDUG/Atkey et al. - 2009 - Unembedding Domain-Specific Languages.pdf:application/pdf},
328 }
329
330 @inproceedings{krishnamurthi_synthesizing_1998,
331 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
332 title = {Synthesizing object-oriented and functional design to promote re-use},
333 isbn = {978-3-540-69064-1},
334 abstract = {Many problems require recursively specified types of data and a collection of tools that operate on those data. Over time, these problems evolve so that the programmer must extend the toolkit or extend the types and adjust the existing tools accordingly. Ideally, this should be done without modifying existing code. Unfortunately, the prevailing program design strategies do not support both forms of extensibility: functional programming accommodates the addition of tools, while object-oriented programming supports either adding new tools or extending the data set, but not both. In this paper, we present a composite design pattern that synthesizes the best of both approaches and in the process resolves the tension between the two design strategies. We also show how this protocol suggests a new set of linguistic facilities for languages that support class systems.},
335 booktitle = {{ECOOP}'98{Object}-{Oriented} {Programming}},
336 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
337 author = {Krishnamurthi, Shriram and Felleisen, Matthias and Friedman, Daniel P.},
338 editor = {Jul, Eric},
339 year = {1998},
340 note = {event-place: Brussels, Belgium},
341 pages = {91--113},
342 file = {Krishnamurthi et al. - 1998 - Synthesizing object-oriented and functional design.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/AMMULPPT/Krishnamurthi et al. - 1998 - Synthesizing object-oriented and functional design.pdf:application/pdf},
343 }
344
345 @incollection{gibbons_functional_2015,
346 address = {Cham},
347 title = {Functional {Programming} for {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}},
348 isbn = {978-3-319-15940-9},
349 abstract = {Domain-specific languages are a popular application area for functional programming; and conversely, functional programming is a popular implementation vehicle for domain-specific languages—at least, for embedded ones. Why is this? The appeal of embedded domain-specific languages is greatly enhanced by the presence of convenient lightweight tools for defining, implementing, and optimising new languages; such tools represent one of functional programming's strengths. In these lectures we discuss functional programming techniques for embedded domain-specific languages; we focus especially on algebraic datatypes and higher-order functions, and their influence on deep and shallow embeddings.},
350 booktitle = {Central {European} {Functional} {Programming} {School}: 5th {Summer} {School}, {CEFP} 2013, {Cluj}-{Napoca}, {Romania}, {July} 8-20, 2013, {Revised} {Selected} {Papers}},
351 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
352 author = {Gibbons, Jeremy},
353 editor = {Zsók, Viktória and Horváth, Zoltán and Csató, Lehel},
354 year = {2015},
355 doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-15940-9_1},
356 pages = {1--28},
357 file = {Gibbons - 2015 - Functional Programming for Domain-Specific Languag.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ARUBLFU6/Gibbons - 2015 - Functional Programming for Domain-Specific Languag.pdf:application/pdf},
358 }
359
360 @mastersthesis{veen_van_der_mutable_2020,
361 address = {Nijmegen},
362 title = {Mutable {Collection} {Types} in {Shallow} {Embedded} {DSLs}},
363 language = {en},
364 school = {Radboud University},
365 author = {Veen, van der, Erin},
366 month = jun,
367 year = {2020},
368 file = {thesis_final.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/Y9QWGGB9/thesis_final.pdf:application/pdf},
369 }
370
371 @phdthesis{alimarine_generic_2005,
372 address = {Nijmegen},
373 type = {{PhD}},
374 title = {Generic {Functional} {Programming}},
375 language = {en},
376 school = {Radboud University},
377 author = {Alimarine, Artem},
378 year = {2005},
379 file = {Alimarine - Generic Functional Programming.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/PDTS3SGX/Alimarine - Generic Functional Programming.pdf:application/pdf},
380 }
381
382 @phdthesis{boer_de_secure_2020,
383 address = {Nijmegen},
384 type = {Bachelor's {Thesis}},
385 title = {Secure {Communication} {Channels} for the {mTask} {System}.},
386 language = {en},
387 school = {Radboud University},
388 author = {Boer, de, Michel},
389 month = jun,
390 year = {2020},
391 file = {Boer, de - 2020 - Secure Communication Channels for the mTask System.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/C46E3FBF/Boer, de - 2020 - Secure Communication Channels for the mTask System.pdf:application/pdf},
392 }
393
394 @inproceedings{barendregt_towards_1987,
395 title = {Towards an intermediate language for graph rewriting},
396 volume = {1},
397 booktitle = {{PARLE}, {Parallel} {Architectures} and {Languages} {Europe}},
398 publisher = {Springer Verlag},
399 author = {Barendregt, HP and van Eekelen, MCJD and Glauert, JRW and Kennaway, JR and Plasmeijer, MJ and Sleep, MR},
400 year = {1987},
401 pages = {159--174},
402 file = {barh87-Lean.ps.gz:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/63FBHND7/barh87-Lean.ps.gz:application/gzip},
403 }
404
405 @incollection{wang_maintaining_2018,
406 address = {Cham},
407 title = {Maintaining {Separation} of {Concerns} {Through} {Task} {Oriented} {Software} {Development}},
408 volume = {10788},
409 isbn = {978-3-319-89718-9 978-3-319-89719-6},
410 abstract = {Task Oriented Programming is a programming paradigm that enhances ‘classic’ functional programming with means to express the coordination of work among people and computer systems, the distribution and control of data sources, and the human-machine interfaces. To make the creation process of such applications feasible, it is important to have separation of concerns. In this paper we demonstrate how this is achieved within the Task Oriented Software Development process and illustrate the approach by means of a case study.},
411 language = {en},
412 urldate = {2019-01-14},
413 booktitle = {Trends in {Functional} {Programming}},
414 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
415 author = {Stutterheim, Jurriën and Achten, Peter and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
416 editor = {Wang, Meng and Owens, Scott},
417 year = {2018},
418 doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-89719-6},
419 pages = {19--38},
420 file = {Stutterheim et al. - 2018 - Maintaining Separation of Concerns Through Task Or.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/4GXJEM2U/Stutterheim et al. - 2018 - Maintaining Separation of Concerns Through Task Or.pdf:application/pdf},
421 }
422
423 @article{barendsen_uniqueness_1996,
424 title = {Uniqueness typing for functional languages with graph rewriting semantics},
425 volume = {6},
426 number = {6},
427 journal = {Mathematical structures in computer science},
428 author = {Barendsen, Erik and Smetsers, Sjaak},
429 year = {1996},
430 pages = {579--612},
431 file = {Barendsen and Smetsers - 1996 - Uniqueness typing for functional languages with gr.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/BPRC6KJK/Barendsen and Smetsers - 1996 - Uniqueness typing for functional languages with gr.pdf:application/pdf},
432 }
433
434 @inproceedings{lijnse_itasks_2009,
435 title = {{iTasks} 2: {iTasks} for {End}-users},
436 booktitle = {International {Symposium} on {Implementation} and {Application} of {Functional} {Languages}},
437 publisher = {Springer},
438 author = {Lijnse, Bas and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
439 year = {2009},
440 pages = {36--54},
441 file = {Lijnse and Plasmeijer - 2009 - iTasks 2 iTasks for End-users.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/KACEWKXY/Lijnse and Plasmeijer - 2009 - iTasks 2 iTasks for End-users.pdf:application/pdf},
442 }
443
444 @mastersthesis{bohm_asynchronous_2019,
445 address = {Nijmegen},
446 title = {Asynchronous {Actions} in a {Synchronous} {World}},
447 abstract = {This thesis introduces a system for asynchronous communication in the iTasks framework. The
448 framework is written in Clean, a pure, lazy, functional language. Tasks need to be able to access
449 data in the system and retrieve data from all kinds of data sources. The share system allows
450 tasks to read arbitrary data sources and provides a simple interface that allows composition of
451 different data sources. This system allows tasks to share and store data in an efficient, re-usable
452 way.
453 A disadvantage of the share system is that it does not allow asynchronous evaluation. When
454 one task is using a share, other tasks have to wait for the full evaluation of this share before they
455 can be evaluated. This has the effect that users in the iTasks framework must wait on other
456 users. This results in poor user experience.
457 We implement a share system which, by way of share rewriting, allows asynchronous evalua-
458 tion. The system can be used to communicate with arbitrary services on the internet, as well as
459 to communicate between different iTasks servers in a distributed context.
460 We show how asynchronous shares are implemented and what the limitations are. We also
461 show multiple practical examples of using asynchronous shares. The new system can be effectively
462 used to consume services on the internet. It fits nicely into existing iTasks programs and requires
463 few changes in existing programs.},
464 language = {en},
465 school = {Radboud University},
466 author = {Böhm, Haye},
467 month = jan,
468 year = {2019},
469 file = {Bohm - Asynchronous Actions in a Synchronous World.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/D3IYPAM5/Bohm - Asynchronous Actions in a Synchronous World.pdf:application/pdf},
470 }
471
472 @inproceedings{hentschel_supersensors:_2016,
473 address = {Vienna, Austria},
474 title = {Supersensors: {Raspberry} {Pi} {Devices} for {Smart} {Campus} {Infrastructure}},
475 isbn = {978-1-5090-4052-0},
476 shorttitle = {Supersensors},
477 doi = {10.1109/FiCloud.2016.16},
478 abstract = {We describe an approach for developing a campuswide sensor network using commodity single board computers. We sketch various use cases for environmental sensor data, for different university stakeholders. Our key premise is that supersensors—sensors with significant compute capability—enable more flexible data collection, processing and reaction. In this paper, we describe the initial prototype deployment of our supersensor system in a single department at the University of Glasgow.},
479 language = {en},
480 urldate = {2019-09-04},
481 booktitle = {2016 {IEEE} 4th {International} {Conference} on {Future} {Internet} of {Things} and {Cloud} ({FiCloud})},
482 publisher = {IEEE},
483 author = {Hentschel, Kristian and Jacob, Dejice and Singer, Jeremy and Chalmers, Matthew},
484 month = aug,
485 year = {2016},
486 pages = {58--62},
487 file = {Hentschel et al. - 2016 - Supersensors Raspberry Pi Devices for Smart Campu.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ATK53FN2/Hentschel et al. - 2016 - Supersensors Raspberry Pi Devices for Smart Campu.pdf:application/pdf},
488 }
489
490 @inproceedings{feijs_multi-tasking_2013,
491 address = {Wuxi, China},
492 title = {Multi-tasking and {Arduino} : why and how?},
493 isbn = {978-90-386-3462-3},
494 abstract = {In this article I argue that it is important to develop experiential prototypes which have multi-tasking capabilities. At the same time I show that for embedded prototype software based on the popular Arduino platform this is not too difficult. The approach is explained and illustrated using technical examples – practical and hands-on, down to the code level. At the same time a few helpful notations for designing and documenting the software are introduced and illustrated by the same examples. Finally a few case studies of the technical approach are listed.},
495 language = {English},
496 booktitle = {Design and semantics of form and movement. 8th {International} {Conference} on {Design} and {Semantics} of {Form} and {Movement} ({DeSForM} 2013)},
497 author = {Feijs, Loe},
498 editor = {Chen, L. L. and Djajadiningrat, T. and Feijs, L. M. G. and Fraser, S. and Hu, J. and Kyffin, S. and Steffen, D.},
499 year = {2013},
500 pages = {119--127},
501 file = {Feijs - 2013 - Multi-tasking and Arduino why and how.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/8A3Q8LHA/Feijs - 2013 - Multi-tasking and Arduino why and how.pdf:application/pdf},
502 }
503
504 @misc{achten_clean_2007,
505 title = {Clean for {Haskell98} {Programmers}},
506 url = {https://www.mbsd.cs.ru.nl/publications/papers/2007/achp2007-CleanHaskellQuickGuide.pdf},
507 language = {en},
508 author = {Achten, Peter},
509 month = jul,
510 year = {2007},
511 file = {Achten - Clean for Haskell98 Programmers.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/69WWSGLF/Achten - Clean for Haskell98 Programmers.pdf:application/pdf},
512 }
513
514 @inproceedings{baccelli_reprogramming_2018,
515 title = {Reprogramming {Low}-end {IoT} {Devices} from the {Cloud}},
516 booktitle = {2018 3rd {Cloudification} of the {Internet} of {Things} ({CIoT})},
517 publisher = {IEEE},
518 author = {Baccelli, Emmanuel and Doerr, Joerg and Jallouli, Ons and Kikuchi, Shinji and Morgenstern, Andreas and Padilla, Francisco Acosta and Schleiser, Kaspar and Thomas, Ian},
519 year = {2018},
520 pages = {1--6},
521 file = {Baccelli et al. - 2018 - Reprogramming Low-end IoT Devices from the Cloud.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/M6LX5ZJN/Baccelli et al. - 2018 - Reprogramming Low-end IoT Devices from the Cloud.pdf:application/pdf},
522 }
523
524 @mastersthesis{piers_task-oriented_2016,
525 address = {Nijmegen},
526 title = {Task-{Oriented} {Programming} for developing non-distributed interruptible embedded systems},
527 language = {en},
528 school = {Radboud University},
529 author = {Piers, Jasper},
530 year = {2016},
531 file = {Piers - Task-Oriented Programming for developing non-distr.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/X8BZM9D4/Piers - Task-Oriented Programming for developing non-distr.pdf:application/pdf},
532 }
533
534 @inproceedings{baccelli_scripting_2018,
535 title = {Scripting {Over}-{The}-{Air}: {Towards} {Containers} on {Low}-end {Devices} in the {Internet} of {Things}},
536 booktitle = {{IEEE} {PerCom} 2018},
537 author = {Baccelli, Emmanuel and Doerr, Joerg and Kikuchi, Shinji and Padilla, Francisco and Schleiser, Kaspar and Thomas, Ian},
538 year = {2018},
539 file = {Baccelli et al. - Scripting Over-The-Air Towards Containers on Low-.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/98UTMFAC/Baccelli et al. - Scripting Over-The-Air Towards Containers on Low-.pdf:application/pdf},
540 }
541
542 @mastersthesis{amazonas_cabral_de_andrade_developing_2018,
543 address = {Nijmegen},
544 title = {Developing {Real} {Life}, {Task} {Oriented} {Applications} for the {Internet} of {Things}},
545 shorttitle = {Developing {Real} {Life}, {TOP} {Applications} for the {IOT}},
546 language = {en},
547 school = {Radboud University},
548 author = {Amazonas Cabral de Andrade, Matheus},
549 year = {2018},
550 file = {Lubbers - prof. dr. dr.h.c. ir. M.J. Plasmeijer.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/JXPEWS85/Lubbers - prof. dr. dr.h.c. ir. M.J. Plasmeijer.pdf:application/pdf},
551 }
552
553 @article{swierstra_data_2008,
554 title = {Data types à la carte},
555 volume = {18},
556 doi = {10.1017/S0956796808006758},
557 number = {4},
558 journal = {Journal of functional programming},
559 author = {Swierstra, Wouter},
560 year = {2008},
561 pages = {423--436},
562 file = {swierstra2008.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/BEQKBXWP/swierstra2008.pdf:application/pdf},
563 }
564
565 @article{groningen_exchanging_2010,
566 title = {Exchanging sources between {Clean} and {Haskell}: {A} double-edged front end for the {Clean} compiler},
567 volume = {45},
568 shorttitle = {Exchanging sources between {Clean} and {Haskell}},
569 number = {11},
570 journal = {ACM Sigplan Notices},
571 author = {Groningen, John van and Noort, Thomas van and Achten, Peter and Koopman, Pieter and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
572 year = {2010},
573 pages = {49--60},
574 file = {groj10-Haskell_front_end_Clean.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/WVZWX8WT/groj10-Haskell_front_end_Clean.pdf:application/pdf},
575 }
576
577 @article{plasmeijer_itasks:_2007,
578 title = {{iTasks}: executable specifications of interactive work flow systems for the web},
579 volume = {42},
580 number = {9},
581 journal = {ACM SIGPLAN Notices},
582 author = {Plasmeijer, Rinus and Achten, Peter and Koopman, Pieter},
583 year = {2007},
584 pages = {141--152},
585 file = {plar2007-ICFP07-iTasks.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/N8EUZP7D/plar2007-ICFP07-iTasks.pdf:application/pdf},
586 }
587
588 @incollection{plasmeijer_shallow_2016,
589 address = {Cham},
590 series = {Lecture {Notes} in {Computer} {Science}},
591 title = {A {Shallow} {Embedded} {Type} {Safe} {Extendable} {DSL} for the {Arduino}},
592 volume = {9547},
593 isbn = {978-3-319-39110-6},
594 urldate = {2017-02-22},
595 booktitle = {Trends in {Functional} {Programming}},
596 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
597 author = {Plasmeijer, Rinus and Koopman, Pieter},
598 year = {2016},
599 doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-39110-6},
600 file = {chp%3A10.1007%2F978-3-319-39110-6_6.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/TJVP6FHF/chp%3A10.1007%2F978-3-319-39110-6_6.pdf:application/pdf},
601 }
602
603 @inproceedings{cheney_lightweight_2002,
604 title = {A lightweight implementation of generics and dynamics},
605 doi = {10.1145/581690.581698},
606 urldate = {2017-05-15},
607 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2002 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} workshop on {Haskell}},
608 publisher = {ACM},
609 author = {Cheney, James and Hinze, Ralf},
610 year = {2002},
611 note = {event-place: Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, USA},
612 keywords = {dynamic typing, generic programming, type representations},
613 pages = {90--104},
614 file = {Cheney and Hinze - 2002 - A lightweight implementation of generics and dynam.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/FZ6EGJRJ/Cheney and Hinze - 2002 - A lightweight implementation of generics and dynam.pdf:application/pdf;HW02.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/A8Z49NK6/HW02.pdf:application/pdf},
615 }
616
617 @article{lilis_survey_2019,
618 title = {A {Survey} of {Metaprogramming} {Languages}},
619 volume = {52},
620 issn = {0360-0300},
621 doi = {10.1145/3354584},
622 abstract = {Metaprogramming is the process of writing computer programs that treat programs as data, enabling them to analyze or transform existing programs or generate new ones. While the concept of metaprogramming has existed for several decades, activities focusing on metaprogramming have been increasing rapidly over the past few years, with most languages offering some metaprogramming support and the amount of metacode being developed growing exponentially. In this article, we introduce a taxonomy of metaprogramming languages and present a survey of metaprogramming languages and systems based on the taxonomy. Our classification is based on the metaprogramming model adopted by the language, the phase of the metaprogram evaluation, the metaprogram source location, and the relation between the metalanguage and the object language.},
623 number = {6},
624 journal = {ACM Comput. Surv.},
625 author = {Lilis, Yannis and Savidis, Anthony},
626 month = oct,
627 year = {2019},
628 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
629 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
630 keywords = {aspect-oriented programming, generative programming, macro systems, meta-object protocols, Metaprogramming, multistage languages, reflection},
631 file = {Lilis and Savidis - 2019 - A Survey of Metaprogramming Languages.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/9MS6TUNR/Lilis and Savidis - 2019 - A Survey of Metaprogramming Languages.pdf:application/pdf},
632 }
633
634 @inproceedings{mainland_why_2007,
635 address = {New York, NY, USA},
636 series = {Haskell '07},
637 title = {Why {It}'s {Nice} to {Be} {Quoted}: {Quasiquoting} for {Haskell}},
638 isbn = {978-1-59593-674-5},
639 doi = {10.1145/1291201.1291211},
640 abstract = {Quasiquoting allows programmers to use domain specific syntax to construct program fragments. By providing concrete syntax for complex data types, programs become easier to read, easier to write, and easier to reason about and maintain. Haskell is an excellent host language for embedded domain specific languages, and quasiquoting ideally complements the language features that make Haskell perform so well in this area. Unfortunately, until now no Haskell compiler has provided support for quasiquoting. We present an implementation in GHC and demonstrate that by leveraging existing compiler capabilities, building a full quasiquoter requires little more work than writing a parser. Furthermore, we provide a compile-time guarantee that all quasiquoted data is type-correct.},
641 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Haskell} {Workshop}},
642 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
643 author = {Mainland, Geoffrey},
644 year = {2007},
645 note = {event-place: Freiburg, Germany},
646 keywords = {meta programming, quasiquoting},
647 pages = {73--82},
648 file = {Mainland - 2007 - Why It's Nice to Be Quoted Quasiquoting for Haske.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/PSJ59GY2/Mainland - 2007 - Why It's Nice to Be Quoted Quasiquoting for Haske.pdf:application/pdf},
649 }
650
651 @article{tratt_domain_2008,
652 title = {Domain {Specific} {Language} {Implementation} via {Compile}-{Time} {Meta}-{Programming}},
653 volume = {30},
654 issn = {0164-0925},
655 doi = {10.1145/1391956.1391958},
656 abstract = {Domain specific languages (DSLs) are mini-languages that are increasingly seen as being a valuable tool for software developers and non-developers alike. DSLs must currently be created in an ad-hoc fashion, often leading to high development costs and implementations of variable quality. In this article, I show how expressive DSLs can be hygienically embedded in the Converge programming language using its compile-time meta-programming facility, the concept of DSL blocks, and specialised error reporting techniques. By making use of pre-existing facilities, and following a simple methodology, DSL implementation costs can be significantly reduced whilst leading to higher quality DSL implementations.},
657 number = {6},
658 journal = {ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst.},
659 author = {Tratt, Laurence},
660 month = oct,
661 year = {2008},
662 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
663 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
664 keywords = {domain specific languages, compile-time meta-programming, Syntax extension},
665 file = {Tratt - 2008 - Domain Specific Language Implementation via Compil.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/HHGYJK4H/Tratt - 2008 - Domain Specific Language Implementation via Compil.pdf:application/pdf},
666 }
667
668 @inproceedings{kariotis_making_2008,
669 address = {New York, NY, USA},
670 series = {Haskell '08},
671 title = {Making {Monads} {First}-{Class} with {Template} {Haskell}},
672 isbn = {978-1-60558-064-7},
673 doi = {10.1145/1411286.1411300},
674 abstract = {Monads as an organizing principle for programming and semantics are notoriously difficult to grasp, yet they are a central and powerful abstraction in Haskell. This paper introduces a domain-specific language, MonadLab, that simplifies the construction of monads, and describes its implementation in Template Haskell. MonadLab makes monad construction truly first class, meaning that arcane theoretical issues with respect to monad transformers are completely hidden from the programmer. The motivation behind the design of MonadLab is to make monadic programming in Haskell simpler while providing a tool for non-Haskell experts that will assist them in understanding this powerful abstraction.},
675 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {First} {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
676 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
677 author = {Kariotis, Pericles S. and Procter, Adam M. and Harrison, William L.},
678 year = {2008},
679 note = {event-place: Victoria, BC, Canada},
680 keywords = {domain-specific languages, monads, staged programming},
681 pages = {99--110},
682 file = {Kariotis et al. - 2008 - Making Monads First-Class with Template Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ZLX24WE8/Kariotis et al. - 2008 - Making Monads First-Class with Template Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
683 }
684
685 @inproceedings{gill_haskell_2009,
686 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
687 title = {A {Haskell} {Hosted} {DSL} for {Writing} {Transformation} {Systems}},
688 isbn = {978-3-642-03034-5},
689 abstract = {KURE is a Haskell hosted Domain Specific Language (DSL) for writing transformation systems based on rewrite strategies. When writing transformation systems, a significant amount of engineering effort goes into setting up plumbing to make sure that specific rewrite rules can fire. Systems like Stratego and Strafunski provide most of this plumbing as infrastructure, allowing the DSL user to focus on the rewrite rules. KURE is a strongly typed strategy control language in the tradition of Stratego and Strafunski. It is intended for writing reasonably efficient rewrite systems, makes use of type families to provide a delimited generic mechanism for tree rewriting, and provides support for efficient identity rewrite detection.},
690 booktitle = {Domain-{Specific} {Languages}},
691 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
692 author = {Gill, Andy},
693 editor = {Taha, Walid Mohamed},
694 year = {2009},
695 pages = {285--309},
696 file = {Gill2009_Chapter_AHaskellHostedDSLForWritingTra.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/I9RJNDYR/Gill2009_Chapter_AHaskellHostedDSLForWritingTra.pdf:application/pdf},
697 }
698
699 @book{peyton_jones_implementation_1987,
700 address = {Hertfordshire},
701 title = {The {Implementation} of {Functional} {Programming} {Languages}},
702 url = {https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/the-implementation-of-functional-programming-languages/},
703 abstract = {My 1987 book is now out of print, but it is available here in its entirety in PDF form, in one of two formats: single-page portrait double-page landscape Both are fully searchable, thanks to OCR and Norman Ramsey. Errata Section 5.2.4, p87. We need an extra rule match us [] E = E This accounts for the possibility that in the constructor rule (Section 5.2.4) there may be some non-nullary constructors for which there are no equations. P168, line 2, "VAR" should be "TVAR".},
704 publisher = {Prentice Hall},
705 author = {Peyton Jones, Simon},
706 month = jan,
707 year = {1987},
708 file = {Peyton Jones - 1987 - The Implementation of Functional Programming Langu.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/9RIR6KGD/Peyton Jones - 1987 - The Implementation of Functional Programming Langu.pdf:application/pdf},
709 }
710
711 @inproceedings{sheard_template_2002,
712 address = {New York, NY, USA},
713 series = {Haskell '02},
714 title = {Template {Meta}-{Programming} for {Haskell}},
715 isbn = {1-58113-605-6},
716 doi = {10.1145/581690.581691},
717 abstract = {We propose a new extension to the purely functional programming language Haskell that supports compile-time meta-programming. The purpose of the system is to support the algorithmic construction of programs at compile-time.The ability to generate code at compile time allows the programmer to implement such features as polytypic programs, macro-like expansion, user directed optimization (such as inlining), and the generation of supporting data structures and functions from existing data structures and functions.Our design is being implemented in the Glasgow Haskell Compiler, ghc.},
718 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2002 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Haskell}},
719 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
720 author = {Sheard, Tim and Jones, Simon Peyton},
721 year = {2002},
722 note = {event-place: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania},
723 keywords = {meta programming, templates},
724 pages = {1--16},
725 file = {Sheard and Jones - 2002 - Template Meta-Programming for Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/2GSK6DSF/Sheard and Jones - 2002 - Template Meta-Programming for Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
726 }
727
728 @inproceedings{seefried_optimising_2004,
729 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
730 title = {Optimising {Embedded} {DSLs} {Using} {Template} {Haskell}},
731 isbn = {978-3-540-30175-2},
732 abstract = {Embedded domain specific languages (EDSLs) provide a specialised language for a particular application area while harnessing the infrastructure of an existing general purpose programming language. The reduction in implementation costs that results from this approach comes at a price: the EDSL often compiles to inefficient code since the host language's compiler only optimises at the level of host language constructs. The paper presents an approach to solving this problem based on compile-time meta-programming which retains the simplicity of the embedded approach. We use PanTHeon, our implementation of an existing EDSL for image synthesis to demonstrate the benefits and drawbacks of this approach. Furthermore, we suggest potential improvements to Template Haskell, the meta-programming framework we are using, which would greatly improve its applicability to this kind of task.},
733 booktitle = {Generative {Programming} and {Component} {Engineering}},
734 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
735 author = {Seefried, Sean and Chakravarty, Manuel and Keller, Gabriele},
736 editor = {Karsai, Gabor and Visser, Eelco},
737 year = {2004},
738 pages = {186--205},
739 file = {Seefried et al. - 2004 - Optimising Embedded DSLs Using Template Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ZRKQ9AH6/Seefried et al. - 2004 - Optimising Embedded DSLs Using Template Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
740 }
741
742 @article{hammond_automatic_2003,
743 title = {{AUTOMATIC} {SKELETONS} {IN} {TEMPLATE} {HASKELL}},
744 volume = {13},
745 doi = {10.1142/S0129626403001380},
746 abstract = {This paper uses Template Haskell to automatically select appropriate skeleton implementations in the Eden parallel dialect of Haskell. The approach allows implementation parameters to be statically tuned according to architectural cost models based on source analyses. This permits us to target a range of parallel architecture classes from a single source specification. A major advantage of the approach is that cost models are user-definable and can be readily extended to new data or computation structures etc.},
747 number = {03},
748 journal = {Parallel Processing Letters},
749 author = {Hammond, Kevin and Berthold, Jost and Loogen, Rita},
750 year = {2003},
751 pages = {413--424},
752 file = {Hammond et al. - 2003 - AUTOMATIC SKELETONS IN TEMPLATE HASKELL.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/HBQ8UXY3/Hammond et al. - 2003 - AUTOMATIC SKELETONS IN TEMPLATE HASKELL.pdf:application/pdf},
753 }
754
755 @inproceedings{adams_template_2012,
756 address = {New York, NY, USA},
757 series = {Haskell '12},
758 title = {Template {Your} {Boilerplate}: {Using} {Template} {Haskell} for {Efficient} {Generic} {Programming}},
759 isbn = {978-1-4503-1574-6},
760 doi = {10.1145/2364506.2364509},
761 abstract = {Generic programming allows the concise expression of algorithms that would otherwise require large amounts of handwritten code. A number of such systems have been developed over the years, but a common drawback of these systems is poor runtime performance relative to handwritten, non-generic code. Generic-programming systems vary significantly in this regard, but few consistently match the performance of handwritten code. This poses a dilemma for developers. Generic-programming systems offer concision but cost performance. Handwritten code offers performance but costs concision.This paper explores the use of Template Haskell to achieve the best of both worlds. It presents a generic-programming system for Haskell that provides both the concision of other generic-programming systems and the efficiency of handwritten code. Our system gives the programmer a high-level, generic-programming interface, but uses Template Haskell to generate efficient, non-generic code that outperforms existing generic-programming systems for Haskell.This paper presents the results of benchmarking our system against both handwritten code and several other generic-programming systems. In these benchmarks, our system matches the performance of handwritten code while other systems average anywhere from two to twenty times slower.},
762 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2012 {Haskell} {Symposium}},
763 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
764 author = {Adams, Michael D. and DuBuisson, Thomas M.},
765 year = {2012},
766 note = {event-place: Copenhagen, Denmark},
767 keywords = {generic programming, scrap your boilerplate, template haskell},
768 pages = {13--24},
769 file = {Adams and DuBuisson - 2012 - Template Your Boilerplate Using Template Haskell .pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/ANAHWLB5/Adams and DuBuisson - 2012 - Template Your Boilerplate Using Template Haskell .pdf:application/pdf},
770 }
771
772 @inproceedings{norell_prototyping_2004,
773 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
774 title = {Prototyping {Generic} {Programming} in {Template} {Haskell}},
775 isbn = {978-3-540-27764-4},
776 abstract = {Generic Programming deals with the construction of programs that can be applied to many different datatypes. This is achieved by parameterizing the generic programs by the structure of the datatypes on which they are to be applied. Programs that can be defined generically range from simple map functions through pretty printers to complex XML tools.},
777 booktitle = {Mathematics of {Program} {Construction}},
778 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
779 author = {Norell, Ulf and Jansson, Patrik},
780 editor = {Kozen, Dexter},
781 year = {2004},
782 pages = {314--333},
783 file = {Norell and Jansson - 2004 - Prototyping Generic Programming in Template Haskel.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/S3EXD65Z/Norell and Jansson - 2004 - Prototyping Generic Programming in Template Haskel.pdf:application/pdf},
784 }
785
786 @incollection{odonnell_embedding_2004,
787 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
788 title = {Embedding a {Hardware} {Description} {Language} in {Template} {Haskell}},
789 isbn = {978-3-540-25935-0},
790 abstract = {Hydra is a domain-specific language for designing digital circuits, which is implemented by embedding within Haskell. Many features required for hardware specification fit well within functional languages, leading in many cases to a perfect embedding. There are some situations, including netlist generation and software logic probes, where the DSL does not fit exactly within the host functional language. A new solution to these problems is based on program transformations performed automatically by metaprograms in Template Haskell.},
791 booktitle = {Domain-{Specific} {Program} {Generation}: {International} {Seminar}, {Dagstuhl} {Castle}, {Germany}, {March} 23-28, 2003. {Revised} {Papers}},
792 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
793 author = {O'Donnell, John T.},
794 editor = {Lengauer, Christian and Batory, Don and Consel, Charles and Odersky, Martin},
795 year = {2004},
796 doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-25935-0_9},
797 pages = {143--164},
798 file = {O'Donnell - 2004 - Embedding a Hardware Description Language in Templ.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/Z2XT7SM3/O'Donnell - 2004 - Embedding a Hardware Description Language in Templ.pdf:application/pdf},
799 }
800
801 @misc{lynagh_unrolling_2003,
802 title = {Unrolling and {Simplifying} {Expressions} with {Template} {Haskell}},
803 url = {http://web.comlab.ox.ac.uk/oucl/work/ian.lynagh/papers/},
804 urldate = {2021-09-07},
805 author = {Lynagh, Ian},
806 month = may,
807 year = {2003},
808 file = {10.1.1.5.9813.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/G4AFM8XZ/10.1.1.5.9813.pdf:application/pdf},
809 }
810
811 @article{elliott_compiling_2003,
812 title = {Compiling embedded languages},
813 volume = {13},
814 doi = {10.1017/S0956796802004574},
815 number = {3},
816 journal = {Journal of Functional Programming},
817 author = {Elliott, Conal and Finne, Sigbjørn and de Moor, Oege},
818 year = {2003},
819 note = {Publisher: Cambridge University Press},
820 pages = {455--481},
821 file = {Elliott et al. - 2003 - Compiling embedded languages.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/3X4Z6AKB/Elliott et al. - 2003 - Compiling embedded languages.pdf:application/pdf},
822 }
823
824 @incollection{czarnecki_dsl_2004,
825 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
826 title = {{DSL} {Implementation} in {MetaOCaml}, {Template} {Haskell}, and {C}++},
827 isbn = {978-3-540-25935-0},
828 abstract = {A wide range of domain-specific languages (DSLs) has been implemented successfully by embedding them in general purpose languages. This paper reviews embedding, and summarizes how two alternative techniques – staged interpreters and templates – can be used to overcome the limitations of embedding. Both techniques involve a form of generative programming. The paper reviews and compares three programming languages that have special support for generative programming. Two of these languages (MetaOCaml and Template Haskell) are research languages, while the third (C++) is already in wide industrial use. The paper identifies several dimensions that can serve as a basis for comparing generative languages.},
829 booktitle = {Domain-{Specific} {Program} {Generation}: {International} {Seminar}, {Dagstuhl} {Castle}, {Germany}, {March} 23-28, 2003. {Revised} {Papers}},
830 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
831 author = {Czarnecki, Krzysztof and O'Donnell, John T. and Striegnitz, Jörg and Taha, Walid},
832 editor = {Lengauer, Christian and Batory, Don and Consel, Charles and Odersky, Martin},
833 year = {2004},
834 doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-25935-0_4},
835 pages = {51--72},
836 file = {Czarnecki et al. - 2004 - DSL Implementation in MetaOCaml, Template Haskell,.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/U6E3325Q/Czarnecki et al. - 2004 - DSL Implementation in MetaOCaml, Template Haskell,.pdf:application/pdf},
837 }
838
839 @inproceedings{sheard_accomplishments_2001,
840 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
841 title = {Accomplishments and {Research} {Challenges} in {Meta}-programming},
842 isbn = {978-3-540-44806-8},
843 abstract = {In the last ten years the study of meta-programming systems, as formal systems worthy of study in their own right, has vastly accelerated. In that time a lot has been accomplished, yet much remains to be done. In this invited talk I wish to review recent accomplishments and future research challenges in hopes that this will spur interest in meta-programming in general and lead to new and better meta-programming systems.},
844 booktitle = {Semantics, {Applications}, and {Implementation} of {Program} {Generation}},
845 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
846 author = {Sheard, Tim},
847 editor = {Taha, Walid},
848 year = {2001},
849 pages = {2--44},
850 file = {Sheard - 2001 - Accomplishments and Research Challenges in Meta-pr.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/M7NT6USA/Sheard - 2001 - Accomplishments and Research Challenges in Meta-pr.pdf:application/pdf},
851 }
852
853 @inproceedings{kohlbecker_hygienic_1986,
854 address = {New York, NY, USA},
855 series = {{LFP} '86},
856 title = {Hygienic {Macro} {Expansion}},
857 isbn = {0-89791-200-4},
858 doi = {10.1145/319838.319859},
859 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1986 {ACM} {Conference} on {LISP} and {Functional} {Programming}},
860 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
861 author = {Kohlbecker, Eugene and Friedman, Daniel P. and Felleisen, Matthias and Duba, Bruce},
862 year = {1986},
863 note = {event-place: Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA},
864 pages = {151--161},
865 file = {Kohlbecker et al. - 1986 - Hygienic Macro Expansion.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/MFH642JU/Kohlbecker et al. - 1986 - Hygienic Macro Expansion.pdf:application/pdf},
866 }
867
868 @inproceedings{lammel_scrap_2003,
869 address = {New York, NY, USA},
870 series = {{TLDI} '03},
871 title = {Scrap {Your} {Boilerplate}: {A} {Practical} {Design} {Pattern} for {Generic} {Programming}},
872 isbn = {1-58113-649-8},
873 doi = {10.1145/604174.604179},
874 abstract = {We describe a design pattern for writing programs that traverse data structures built from rich mutually-recursive data types. Such programs often have a great deal of "boilerplate" code that simply walks the structure, hiding a small amount of "real" code that constitutes the reason for the traversal.Our technique allows most of this boilerplate to be written once and for all, or even generated mechanically, leaving the programmer free to concentrate on the important part of the algorithm. These generic programs are much more adaptive when faced with data structure evolution because they contain many fewer lines of type-specific code.Our approach is simple to understand, reasonably efficient, and it handles all the data types found in conventional functional programming languages. It makes essential use of rank-2 polymorphism, an extension found in some implementations of Haskell. Further it relies on a simple type-safe cast operator.},
875 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2003 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Workshop} on {Types} in {Languages} {Design} and {Implementation}},
876 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
877 author = {Lämmel, Ralf and Jones, Simon Peyton},
878 year = {2003},
879 note = {event-place: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA},
880 keywords = {generic programming, rank-2 types, traversal, type cast},
881 pages = {26--37},
882 file = {Lämmel and Jones - 2003 - Scrap Your Boilerplate A Practical Design Pattern.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/P2PJYYY3/Lämmel and Jones - 2003 - Scrap Your Boilerplate A Practical Design Pattern.pdf:application/pdf},
883 }
884
885 @inproceedings{bawden_quasiquotation_1999,
886 address = {Aarhus, Denmark},
887 series = {{BRICS} {Notes} {Series}},
888 title = {Quasiquotation in {Lisp}},
889 volume = {NS-99-1},
890 doi = {10.1.1.22.1290},
891 booktitle = {O. {Danvy}, {Ed}., {University} of {Aarhus}, {Dept}. of {Computer} {Science}},
892 publisher = {BRICS},
893 author = {Bawden, Alan},
894 year = {1999},
895 pages = {88--99},
896 file = {Bawden - 1999 - Quasiquotation in Lisp.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/CIFANZAW/Bawden - 1999 - Quasiquotation in Lisp.pdf:application/pdf},
897 }
898
899 @inproceedings{clifton-everest_embedding_2014,
900 address = {Cham},
901 title = {Embedding {Foreign} {Code}},
902 isbn = {978-3-319-04132-2},
903 abstract = {Special purpose embedded languages facilitate generating high-performance code from purely functional high-level code; for example, we want to program highly parallel GPUs without the usual high barrier to entry and the time-consuming development process. We previously demonstrated the feasibility of a skeleton-based, generative approach to compiling such embedded languages.},
904 booktitle = {Practical {Aspects} of {Declarative} {Languages}},
905 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
906 author = {Clifton-Everest, Robert and McDonell, Trevor L. and Chakravarty, Manuel M. T. and Keller, Gabriele},
907 editor = {Flatt, Matthew and Guo, Hai-Feng},
908 year = {2014},
909 pages = {136--151},
910 file = {Clifton-Everest et al. - 2014 - Embedding Foreign Code.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/JTJGK5BX/Clifton-Everest et al. - 2014 - Embedding Foreign Code.pdf:application/pdf},
911 }
912
913 @inproceedings{shioda_libdsl_2014,
914 address = {New York, NY, USA},
915 series = {{GPCE} 2014},
916 title = {{LibDSL}: {A} {Library} for {Developing} {Embedded} {Domain} {Specific} {Languages} in d via {Template} {Metaprogramming}},
917 isbn = {978-1-4503-3161-6},
918 doi = {10.1145/2658761.2658770},
919 abstract = {This paper presents a library called LibDSL that helps the implementer of an embedded domain specific language (EDSL) effectively develop it in D language. The LibDSL library accepts as input some kinds of “specifications” of the EDSL that the implementer is going to develop and a D program within which an EDSL source program written by the user is embedded. It produces the front-end code of an LALR parser for the EDSL program and back-end code of the execution engine. LibDSL is able to produce two kinds of execution engines, namely compiler-based and interpreter-based engines, either of which the user can properly choose depending on whether an EDSL program is known at compile time or not. We have implemented the LibDSL system by using template metaprogramming and other advanced facilities such as compile-time function execution of D language. EDSL programs developed by means of LibDSL have a nice integrativeness with the host language.},
920 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2014 {International} {Conference} on {Generative} {Programming}: {Concepts} and {Experiences}},
921 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
922 author = {Shioda, Masato and Iwasaki, Hideya and Sato, Shigeyuki},
923 year = {2014},
924 note = {event-place: Västerås, Sweden},
925 keywords = {Metaprogramming, D language, Embedded domain specific languages, Library},
926 pages = {63--72},
927 file = {Shioda et al. - 2014 - LibDSL A Library for Developing Embedded Domain S.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/3WFYJPFR/Shioda et al. - 2014 - LibDSL A Library for Developing Embedded Domain S.pdf:application/pdf},
928 }
929
930 @inproceedings{duregard_embedded_2011,
931 address = {New York, NY, USA},
932 series = {Haskell '11},
933 title = {Embedded {Parser} {Generators}},
934 isbn = {978-1-4503-0860-1},
935 doi = {10.1145/2034675.2034689},
936 abstract = {We present a novel method of embedding context-free grammars in Haskell, and to automatically generate parsers and pretty-printers from them. We have implemented this method in a library called BNFC-meta (from the BNF Converter, which it is built on). The library builds compiler front ends using metaprogramming instead of conventional code generation. Parsers are built from labelled BNF grammars that are defined directly in Haskell modules. Our solution combines features of parser generators (static grammar checks, a highly specialised grammar DSL) and adds several features that are otherwise exclusive to combinatory libraries such as the ability to reuse, parameterise and generate grammars inside Haskell.To allow writing grammars in concrete syntax, BNFC-meta provides a quasi-quoter that can parse grammars (embedded in Haskell files) at compile time and use metaprogramming to replace them with their abstract syntax. We also generate quasi-quoters so that the languages we define with BNFC-meta can be embedded in the same way. With a minimal change to the grammar, we support adding anti-quotation to the generated quasi-quoters, which allows users of the defined language to mix concrete and abstract syntax almost seamlessly. Unlike previous methods of achieving anti-quotation, the method used by BNFC-meta is simple, efficient and avoids polluting the abstract syntax types.},
937 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 4th {ACM} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
938 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
939 author = {Duregård, Jonas and Jansson, Patrik},
940 year = {2011},
941 note = {event-place: Tokyo, Japan},
942 keywords = {domain specific languages, metaprogramming},
943 pages = {107--117},
944 file = {Duregård and Jansson - 2011 - Embedded Parser Generators.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/H5A8TPWV/Duregård and Jansson - 2011 - Embedded Parser Generators.pdf:application/pdf},
945 }
946
947 @inproceedings{eisenberg_promoting_2014,
948 address = {New York, NY, USA},
949 series = {Haskell '14},
950 title = {Promoting {Functions} to {Type} {Families} in {Haskell}},
951 isbn = {978-1-4503-3041-1},
952 doi = {10.1145/2633357.2633361},
953 abstract = {Haskell, as implemented in the Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC), is enriched with many extensions that support type-level programming, such as promoted datatypes, kind polymorphism, and type families. Yet, the expressiveness of the type-level language remains limited. It is missing many features present at the term level, including case expressions, anonymous functions, partially-applied functions, and let expressions. In this paper, we present an algorithm - with a proof of correctness - to encode these term-level constructs at the type level. Our approach is automated and capable of promoting a wide array of functions to type families. We also highlight and discuss those term-level features that are not promotable. In so doing, we offer a critique on GHC's existing type system, showing what it is already capable of and where it may want improvement.We believe that delineating the mismatch between GHC's term level and its type level is a key step toward supporting dependently typed programming.},
954 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2014 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
955 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
956 author = {Eisenberg, Richard A. and Stolarek, Jan},
957 year = {2014},
958 note = {event-place: Gothenburg, Sweden},
959 keywords = {Haskell, defunctionalization, type-level programming},
960 pages = {95--106},
961 file = {Eisenberg and Stolarek - 2014 - Promoting Functions to Type Families in Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/PQXGBM6M/Eisenberg and Stolarek - 2014 - Promoting Functions to Type Families in Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
962 }
963
964 @inproceedings{viera_staged_2018,
965 address = {New York, NY, USA},
966 series = {{IFL} 2018},
967 title = {A {Staged} {Embedding} of {Attribute} {Grammars} in {Haskell}},
968 isbn = {978-1-4503-7143-8},
969 doi = {10.1145/3310232.3310235},
970 abstract = {In this paper, we present an embedding of attribute grammars in Haskell, that is both modular and type-safe, while providing the user with domain specific error messages.Our approach involves to delay part of the safety checks to runtime. When a grammar is correct, we are able to extract a function that can be run without expecting any runtime error related to the EDSL.},
971 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 30th {Symposium} on {Implementation} and {Application} of {Functional} {Languages}},
972 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
973 author = {Viera, Marcos and Balestrieri, Florent and Pardo, Alberto},
974 year = {2018},
975 note = {event-place: Lowell, MA, USA},
976 keywords = {Haskell, EDSL, Attribute Grammars, Dynamics, Staging},
977 pages = {95--106},
978 file = {Viera et al. - 2018 - A Staged Embedding of Attribute Grammars in Haskel.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/53D4HT9C/Viera et al. - 2018 - A Staged Embedding of Attribute Grammars in Haskel.pdf:application/pdf},
979 }
980
981 @incollection{kiselyov_typed_2012,
982 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
983 title = {Typed {Tagless} {Final} {Interpreters}},
984 isbn = {978-3-642-32202-0},
985 abstract = {The so-called `typed tagless final' approach of [6] has collected and polished a number of techniques for representing typed higher-order languages in a typed metalanguage, along with type-preserving interpretation, compilation and partial evaluation. The approach is an alternative to the traditional, or `initial' encoding of an object language as a (generalized) algebraic data type. Both approaches permit multiple interpretations of an expression, to evaluate it, pretty-print, etc. The final encoding represents all and only typed object terms without resorting to generalized algebraic data types, dependent or other fancy types. The final encoding lets us add new language forms and interpretations without breaking the existing terms and interpreters.},
986 booktitle = {Generic and {Indexed} {Programming}: {International} {Spring} {School}, {SSGIP} 2010, {Oxford}, {UK}, {March} 22-26, 2010, {Revised} {Lectures}},
987 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
988 author = {Kiselyov, Oleg},
989 editor = {Gibbons, Jeremy},
990 year = {2012},
991 doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-32202-0_3},
992 pages = {130--174},
993 file = {Kiselyov - 2012 - Typed Tagless Final Interpreters.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/9NBYZLRP/Kiselyov - 2012 - Typed Tagless Final Interpreters.pdf:application/pdf},
994 }
995
996 @article{laufer_type_1996,
997 title = {Type classes with existential types},
998 volume = {6},
999 doi = {10.1017/S0956796800001817},
1000 number = {3},
1001 journal = {Journal of Functional Programming},
1002 author = {Läufer, Konstantin},
1003 year = {1996},
1004 note = {Publisher: Cambridge University Press},
1005 pages = {485--518},
1006 file = {Läufer - 1996 - Type classes with existential types.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/FG73PZJE/Läufer - 1996 - Type classes with existential types.pdf:application/pdf},
1007 }
1008
1009 @incollection{hinze_fun_2003,
1010 address = {Palgrave},
1011 series = {Cornerstones of {Computing}},
1012 title = {Fun {With} {Phantom} {Types}},
1013 isbn = {978-0-333-99285-2},
1014 booktitle = {The {Fun} of {Programming}},
1015 publisher = {Bloomsbury Publishing},
1016 author = {Hinze, Ralf},
1017 editor = {Gibbons, Jeremy and de Moor, Oege},
1018 year = {2003},
1019 pages = {245--262},
1020 }
1021
1022 @inproceedings{boulton_experience_1992,
1023 address = {North-Holland},
1024 title = {Experience with embedding hardware description languages in {HOL}},
1025 volume = {10},
1026 isbn = {0-444-89686-4},
1027 abstract = {The semantics of hardware description languages can be represented in higher order logic. This provides a formal de nition that is suitable for machine processing. Experiments are in progress at Cambridge to see whether this method can be the basis of practical tools based on the HOL theorem-proving assistant. Three languages are being investigated: ELLA, Silage and VHDL. The approaches taken for these languages are compared and current progress on building semantically-based theorem-proving tools is discussed.},
1028 language = {en},
1029 booktitle = {{IFIP} {TC10}/{WG}},
1030 publisher = {Elsevier},
1031 author = {Boulton, Richard and Gordon, Andrew and Gordon, Mike and Harrison, John and Herbert, John and Tassel, John Van},
1032 editor = {Stavridou, Victoria and Melham, Thomas F. and Boute, Raymond T.},
1033 year = {1992},
1034 note = {event-place: Nijmegen, NL},
1035 pages = {129--156},
1036 file = {Boulton et al. - Experience with embedding hardware description lan.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/USAAA6WM/Boulton et al. - Experience with embedding hardware description lan.pdf:application/pdf},
1037 }
1038
1039 @inproceedings{terei_safe_2012,
1040 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1041 series = {Haskell '12},
1042 title = {Safe {Haskell}},
1043 isbn = {978-1-4503-1574-6},
1044 doi = {10.1145/2364506.2364524},
1045 abstract = {Though Haskell is predominantly type-safe, implementations contain a few loopholes through which code can bypass typing and module encapsulation. This paper presents Safe Haskell, a language extension that closes these loopholes. Safe Haskell makes it possible to confine and safely execute untrusted, possibly malicious code. By strictly enforcing types, Safe Haskell allows a variety of different policies from API sandboxing to information-flow control to be implemented easily as monads. Safe Haskell is aimed to be as unobtrusive as possible. It enforces properties that programmers tend to meet already by convention. We describe the design of Safe Haskell and an implementation (currently shipping with GHC) that infers safety for code that lies in a safe subset of the language. We use Safe Haskell to implement an online Haskell interpreter that can securely execute arbitrary untrusted code with no overhead. The use of Safe Haskell greatly simplifies this task and allows the use of a large body of existing code and tools.},
1046 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2012 {Haskell} {Symposium}},
1047 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1048 author = {Terei, David and Marlow, Simon and Peyton Jones, Simon and Mazières, David},
1049 year = {2012},
1050 note = {event-place: Copenhagen, Denmark},
1051 keywords = {haskell, security, type safety},
1052 pages = {137--148},
1053 file = {2364506.2364524.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/5SMB272R/2364506.2364524.pdf:application/pdf},
1054 }
1055
1056 @techreport{leijen_parsec_2001,
1057 address = {Utrecht},
1058 title = {Parsec: {Direct} {Style} {Monadic} {Parser} {Combinators} {For} {The} {Real} {World}},
1059 language = {en},
1060 number = {UU-CS-2001-27},
1061 institution = {Universiteit Utrecht},
1062 author = {Leijen, Daan and Meijer, Erik},
1063 year = {2001},
1064 pages = {22},
1065 file = {Leijen - Parsec Direct Style Monadic Parser Combinators Fo.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/J78G3FZ2/Leijen - Parsec Direct Style Monadic Parser Combinators Fo.pdf:application/pdf},
1066 }
1067
1068 @inproceedings{gibbons_folding_2014,
1069 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1070 series = {{ICFP} '14},
1071 title = {Folding {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}: {Deep} and {Shallow} {Embeddings} ({Functional} {Pearl})},
1072 isbn = {978-1-4503-2873-9},
1073 doi = {10.1145/2628136.2628138},
1074 abstract = {A domain-specific language can be implemented by embedding within a general-purpose host language. This embedding may be deep or shallow, depending on whether terms in the language construct syntactic or semantic representations. The deep and shallow styles are closely related, and intimately connected to folds; in this paper, we explore that connection.},
1075 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 19th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Conference} on {Functional} {Programming}},
1076 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1077 author = {Gibbons, Jeremy and Wu, Nicolas},
1078 year = {2014},
1079 note = {event-place: Gothenburg, Sweden},
1080 keywords = {domain-specific languages, deep and shallow embedding, folds},
1081 pages = {339--347},
1082 file = {Gibbons and Wu - 2014 - Folding Domain-Specific Languages Deep and Shallo.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/6WNWSLFJ/Gibbons and Wu - 2014 - Folding Domain-Specific Languages Deep and Shallo.pdf:application/pdf},
1083 }
1084
1085 @inproceedings{oliveira_typecase_2005,
1086 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1087 series = {Haskell '05},
1088 title = {{TypeCase}: {A} {Design} {Pattern} for {Type}-{Indexed} {Functions}},
1089 isbn = {1-59593-071-X},
1090 doi = {10.1145/1088348.1088358},
1091 abstract = {A type-indexed function is a function that is defined for each member of some family of types. Haskell's type class mechanism provides collections of open type-indexed functions, in which the indexing family can be extended by defining a new type class instance but the collection of functions is fixed. The purpose of this paper is to present TypeCase: a design pattern that allows the definition of closed type-indexed functions, in which the index family is fixed but the collection of functions is extensible. It is inspired by Cheney and Hinze's work on lightweight approaches to generic programming. We generalise their techniques as a design pattern. Furthermore, we show that type-indexed functions with type-indexed types, and consequently generic functions with generic types, can also be encoded in a lightweight manner, thereby overcoming one of the main limitations of the lightweight approaches.},
1092 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2005 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Haskell}},
1093 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1094 author = {Oliveira, Bruno C. d. S. and Gibbons, Jeremy},
1095 year = {2005},
1096 note = {event-place: Tallinn, Estonia},
1097 keywords = {generic programming, type classes, type-indexed functions},
1098 pages = {98--109},
1099 file = {Oliveira and Gibbons - 2005 - TypeCase A Design Pattern for Type-Indexed Functi.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/RBKEZKHN/Oliveira and Gibbons - 2005 - TypeCase A Design Pattern for Type-Indexed Functi.pdf:application/pdf},
1100 }
1101
1102 @inproceedings{odersky_putting_1996,
1103 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1104 series = {{POPL} '96},
1105 title = {Putting {Type} {Annotations} to {Work}},
1106 isbn = {0-89791-769-3},
1107 doi = {10.1145/237721.237729},
1108 abstract = {We study an extension of the Hindley/Milner system with explicit type scheme annotations and type declarations. The system can express polymorphic function arguments, user-defined data types with abstract components, and structure types with polymorphic fields. More generally, all programs of the polymorphic lambda calculus can be encoded by a translation between typing derivations. We show that type reconstruction in this system can be reduced to the decidable problem of first-order unification under a mixed prefix.},
1109 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 23rd {ACM} {SIGPLAN}-{SIGACT} {Symposium} on {Principles} of {Programming} {Languages}},
1110 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1111 author = {Odersky, Martin and Läufer, Konstantin},
1112 year = {1996},
1113 note = {event-place: St. Petersburg Beach, Florida, USA},
1114 pages = {54--67},
1115 file = {Odersky and Läufer - 1996 - Putting Type Annotations to Work.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/WC37TU5H/Odersky and Läufer - 1996 - Putting Type Annotations to Work.pdf:application/pdf},
1116 }
1117
1118 @inproceedings{najd_everything_2016,
1119 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1120 series = {{PEPM} '16},
1121 title = {Everything {Old} is {New} {Again}: {Quoted} {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}},
1122 isbn = {978-1-4503-4097-7},
1123 doi = {10.1145/2847538.2847541},
1124 abstract = {We describe a new approach to implementing Domain-Specific Languages(DSLs), called Quoted DSLs (QDSLs), that is inspired by two old ideas:quasi-quotation, from McCarthy's Lisp of 1960, and the subformula principle of normal proofs, from Gentzen's natural deduction of 1935. QDSLs reuse facilities provided for the host language, since host and quoted terms share the same syntax, type system, and normalisation rules. QDSL terms are normalised to a canonical form, inspired by the subformula principle, which guarantees that one can use higher-order types in the source while guaranteeing first-order types in the target, and enables using types to guide fusion. We test our ideas by re-implementing Feldspar, which was originally implemented as an Embedded DSL (EDSL), as a QDSL; and we compare the QDSL and EDSL variants. The two variants produce identical code.},
1125 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2016 {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Partial} {Evaluation} and {Program} {Manipulation}},
1126 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1127 author = {Najd, Shayan and Lindley, Sam and Svenningsson, Josef and Wadler, Philip},
1128 year = {2016},
1129 note = {event-place: St. Petersburg, FL, USA},
1130 keywords = {EDSL, domain-specific language, DSL, embedded language, normalisation, QDSL, quotation, subformula principle},
1131 pages = {25--36},
1132 file = {Najd et al. - 2016 - Everything Old is New Again Quoted Domain-Specifi.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/NZJW5ZVF/Najd et al. - 2016 - Everything Old is New Again Quoted Domain-Specifi.pdf:application/pdf},
1133 }
1134
1135 @article{carette_finally_2009,
1136 title = {Finally tagless, partially evaluated: {Tagless} staged interpreters for simpler typed languages},
1137 volume = {19},
1138 doi = {10.1017/S0956796809007205},
1139 number = {5},
1140 journal = {Journal of Functional Programming},
1141 author = {Carette, Jacques and Kiselyov, Oleg and Shan, Chung-Chieh},
1142 year = {2009},
1143 note = {Publisher: Cambridge University Press},
1144 pages = {509--543},
1145 file = {CARETTE et al. - 2009 - Finally tagless, partially evaluated Tagless stag.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/T8C8VMHP/CARETTE et al. - 2009 - Finally tagless, partially evaluated Tagless stag.pdf:application/pdf},
1146 }
1147
1148 @inproceedings{leijen_domain_2000,
1149 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1150 series = {{DSL} '99},
1151 title = {Domain {Specific} {Embedded} {Compilers}},
1152 isbn = {1-58113-255-7},
1153 doi = {10.1145/331960.331977},
1154 abstract = {Domain-specific embedded languages (DSELs) expressed in higher-order, typed (HOT) languages provide a composable framework for domain-specific abstractions. Such a framework is of greater utility than a collection of stand-alone domain-specific languages. Usually, embedded domain specific languages are build on top of a set of domain specific primitive functions that are ultimately implemented using some form of foreign function call. We sketch a general design pattern/or embedding client-server style services into Haskell using a domain specific embedded compiler for the server's source language. In particular we apply this idea to implement Haskell/DB, a domain specific embdedded compiler that dynamically generates of SQL queries from monad comprehensions, which are then executed on an arbitrary ODBC database server.},
1155 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2nd {Conference} on {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}},
1156 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1157 author = {Leijen, Daan and Meijer, Erik},
1158 year = {2000},
1159 note = {event-place: Austin, Texas, USA},
1160 pages = {109--122},
1161 file = {Leijen and Meijer - 2000 - Domain Specific Embedded Compilers.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YHPF2VZ6/Leijen and Meijer - 2000 - Domain Specific Embedded Compilers.pdf:application/pdf},
1162 }
1163
1164 @techreport{plasmeijer_clean_2021,
1165 address = {Nijmegen},
1166 title = {Clean {Language} {Report} version 3.1},
1167 urldate = {2021-12-22},
1168 institution = {Institute for Computing and Information Sciences},
1169 author = {Plasmeijer, Rinus and van Eekelen, Marko and van Groningen, John},
1170 month = dec,
1171 year = {2021},
1172 pages = {127},
1173 file = {CleanLanguageReport.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/I2SDRIH6/CleanLanguageReport.pdf:application/pdf},
1174 }
1175
1176 @inproceedings{nocker_concurrent_1991,
1177 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
1178 title = {Concurrent clean},
1179 isbn = {978-3-540-47472-2},
1180 abstract = {Concurrent Clean is an experimental, lazy, higher-order parallel functional programming language based on term graph rewriting. An important difference with other languages is that in Clean graphs are manipulated and not terms. This can be used by the programmer to control communication and sharing of computation. Cyclic structures can be defined. Concurrent Clean furthermore allows to control the (parallel) order of evaluation to make efficient evaluation possible. With help of sequential annotations the default lazy evaluation can be locally changed into eager evaluation. The language enables the definition of partially strict data structures which make a whole new class of algorithms feasible in a functional language. A powerful and fast strictness analyser is incorporated in the system. The quality of the code generated by the Clean compiler has been greatly improved such that it is one of the best code generators for a lazy functional language. Two very powerful parallel annotations enable the programmer to define concurrent functional programs with arbitrary process topologies. Concurrent Clean is set up in such a way that the efficiency achieved for the sequential case can largely be maintained for a parallel implementation on loosely coupled parallel machine architectures.},
1181 booktitle = {{PARLE} '91 {Parallel} {Architectures} and {Languages} {Europe}},
1182 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
1183 author = {Nöcker, E. G. J. M. H. and Smetsers, J. E. W. and van Eekelen, M. C. J. D. and Plasmeijer, M. J.},
1184 editor = {Aarts, Emile H. L. and van Leeuwen, Jan and Rem, Martin},
1185 year = {1991},
1186 pages = {202--219},
1187 file = {Nöcker et al. - 1991 - Concurrent clean.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/XHTNR7BR/Nöcker et al. - 1991 - Concurrent clean.pdf:application/pdf},
1188 }
1189
1190 @incollection{mernik_extensible_2013,
1191 address = {Hershey, PA, USA},
1192 title = {Extensible {Languages}: {Blurring} the {Distinction} between {DSL} and {GPL}},
1193 isbn = {978-1-4666-2092-6},
1194 abstract = {Out of a concern for focus and concision, domain-specific languages (DSLs) are usually very different from general purpose programming languages (GPLs), both at the syntactic and the semantic levels. One approach to DSL implementation is to write a full language infrastructure, including parser, interpreter, or even compiler. Another approach however, is to ground the DSL into an extensible GPL, giving you control over its own syntax and semantics. The DSL may then be designed merely as an extension to the original GPL, and its implementation may boil down to expressing only the differences with it. The task of DSL implementation is hence considerably eased. The purpose of this chapter is to provide a tour of the features that make a GPL extensible, and to demonstrate how, in this context, the distinction between DSL and GPL can blur, sometimes to the point of complete disappearance.},
1195 booktitle = {Formal and {Practical} {Aspects} of {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}: {Recent} {Developments}},
1196 publisher = {IGI Global},
1197 author = {Verna, Didier},
1198 editor = {Mernik, Marjan},
1199 year = {2013},
1200 doi = {10.4018/978-1-4666-2092-6.ch001},
1201 pages = {1--31},
1202 }
1203
1204 @inproceedings{hudak_modular_1998,
1205 title = {Modular domain specific languages and tools},
1206 doi = {10.1109/ICSR.1998.685738},
1207 booktitle = {Proceedings. {Fifth} {International} {Conference} on {Software} {Reuse} ({Cat}. {No}.{98TB100203})},
1208 author = {Hudak, P.},
1209 year = {1998},
1210 pages = {134--142},
1211 file = {Hudak - 1998 - Modular domain specific languages and tools.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/JX7KZ2ST/Hudak - 1998 - Modular domain specific languages and tools.pdf:application/pdf},
1212 }
1213
1214 @book{fowler_domain_2010,
1215 edition = {1st},
1216 title = {Domain {Specific} {Languages}},
1217 isbn = {0-321-71294-3},
1218 abstract = {Designed as a wide-ranging guide to Domain Specific Languages (DSLs) and how to approach building them, this book covers a variety of different techniques available for DSLs. The goal is to provide readers with enough information to make an informed choice about whether or not to use a DSL and what kinds of DSL techniques to employ. Part I is a 150-page narrative overview that gives you a broad understanding of general principles. The reference material in Parts II through VI provides the details and examples you willneed to get started using the various techniques discussed. Both internal and external DSL topics are covered, in addition to alternative computational models and code generation. Although the general principles and patterns presented can be used with whatever programming language you happen to be using, most of the examples are in Java or C\#.},
1219 publisher = {Addison-Wesley Professional},
1220 author = {Fowler, Martin},
1221 year = {2010},
1222 file = {Fowler - 2010 - Domain-specific languages.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YYMYXTZ5/Fowler - 2010 - Domain-specific languages.pdf:application/pdf},
1223 }
1224
1225 @misc{peter_t_lewis_speech_1985,
1226 address = {Washington, D.C.},
1227 type = {Speech},
1228 title = {Speech},
1229 url = {http://www.chetansharma.com/correcting-the-iot-history/},
1230 author = {{Peter T. Lewis}},
1231 month = sep,
1232 year = {1985},
1233 annote = {By connecting devices such as traffic signal control boxes, underground gas station tanks and home refrigerators to supervisory control systems, modems, auto-dialers and cellular phones, we can transmit status of these devices to cell sites, then pipe that data through the Internet and address it to people near and far that need that information.  I predict that not only humans, but machines and other things will interactively communicate via the Internet.  The Internet of Things, or IoT, is the integration of people, processes and technology with connectable devices and sensors to enable remote monitoring, status, manipulation and evaluation of trends of such devices.  When all these technologies and voluminous amounts of Things are interfaced together -- namely, devices/machines, supervisory controllers, cellular and the Internet, there is nothing we cannot connect to and communicate with.  What I am calling the Internet of Things will be far reaching.},
1234 }
1235
1236 @article{weiser_computer_1991,
1237 title = {The {Computer} for the 21 st {Century}},
1238 volume = {265},
1239 language = {en},
1240 number = {3},
1241 journal = {Scientific American},
1242 author = {Weiser, Mark},
1243 month = sep,
1244 year = {1991},
1245 pages = {94--105},
1246 file = {Weiser - 1991 - The Computer for the 21 st Century.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/N5456M2M/Weiser - 1991 - The Computer for the 21 st Century.pdf:application/pdf},
1247 }
1248
1249 @misc{evans_internet_2011,
1250 title = {The {Internet} of {Things}: {How} the {Next} {Evolution} of the {Internet} {Is} {Changing} {Everything}},
1251 url = {https://www.cisco.com/c/dam/en_us/about/ac79/docs/innov/IoT_IBSG_0411FINAL.pdf},
1252 language = {en},
1253 publisher = {Cisco Internet Business Solutions Group (IBSG)},
1254 author = {Evans, Dave},
1255 month = apr,
1256 year = {2011},
1257 file = {Evans - 2011 - How the Next Evolution of the Internet Is Changing.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/32YXCM6P/Evans - 2011 - How the Next Evolution of the Internet Is Changing.pdf:application/pdf},
1258 }
1259
1260 @inproceedings{ireland_classification_2009,
1261 address = {Cancun, Mexico},
1262 title = {A {Classification} of {Object}-{Relational} {Impedance} {Mismatch}},
1263 isbn = {978-0-7695-3550-0},
1264 doi = {10.1109/DBKDA.2009.11},
1265 booktitle = {First {International} {Conference} on {Advances} in {Databases}, {Knowledge}, and {Data} {Applications}},
1266 publisher = {IEEE},
1267 author = {Ireland, Christopher and Bowers, David and Newton, Michael and Waugh, Kevin},
1268 year = {2009},
1269 pages = {36--43},
1270 }
1271
1272 @incollection{koopman_type-safe_2019,
1273 address = {Cham},
1274 title = {Type-{Safe} {Functions} and {Tasks} in a {Shallow} {Embedded} {DSL} for {Microprocessors}},
1275 isbn = {978-3-030-28346-9},
1276 abstract = {The Internet of Things, IoT, brings us large amounts of connected computing devices that are equipped with dedicated sensors and actuators. These computing devices are typically driven by a cheap microprocessor system with a relatively slow processor and a very limited amount of memory. Due to the special input-output capabilities of IoT devices and their connections it is very attractive to execute (parts of) programs on these microcomputers.},
1277 booktitle = {Central {European} {Functional} {Programming} {School}: 6th {Summer} {School}, {CEFP} 2015, {Budapest}, {Hungary}, {July} 610, 2015, {Revised} {Selected} {Papers}},
1278 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
1279 author = {Koopman, Pieter and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
1280 editor = {Zsók, Viktória and Porkoláb, Zoltán and Horváth, Zoltán},
1281 year = {2019},
1282 doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-28346-9_8},
1283 pages = {283--340},
1284 file = {Koopman and Plasmeijer - 2019 - Type-Safe Functions and Tasks in a Shallow Embedde.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/UY2DY4EJ/Koopman and Plasmeijer - 2019 - Type-Safe Functions and Tasks in a Shallow Embedde.pdf:application/pdf},
1285 }
1286
1287 @techreport{cheney_first-class_2003,
1288 title = {First-class phantom types},
1289 url = {https://ecommons.cornell.edu/handle/1813/5614},
1290 number = {TR2003-1901},
1291 urldate = {2017-05-15},
1292 institution = {Cornell University},
1293 author = {Cheney, James and Hinze, Ralf},
1294 year = {2003},
1295 file = {Cheney and Hinze - 2003 - First-class phantom types.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/IBKGCFG2/Cheney and Hinze - 2003 - First-class phantom types.pdf:application/pdf},
1296 }
1297
1298 @inproceedings{baars_typing_2002,
1299 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1300 series = {{ICFP} '02},
1301 title = {Typing {Dynamic} {Typing}},
1302 isbn = {1-58113-487-8},
1303 doi = {10.1145/581478.581494},
1304 abstract = {Even when programming in a statically typed language we every now and then encounter statically untypable values; such values result from interpreting values or from communicating with the outside world. To cope with this problem most languages include some form of dynamic types. It may be that the core language has been explicitly extended with such a type, or that one is allowed to live dangerously by using functions like unsafeCoerce. We show how, by a careful use of existentially and universally quantified types, one may achievem the same effect, without extending the language with new or unsafe features. The techniques explained are universally applicable, provided the core language is expressive enough; this is the case for the common implementations of Haskell. The techniques are used in the description of a type checking compiler that, starting from an expression term, constructs a typed function representing the semantics of that expression. In this function the overhead associated with the type checking is only once being paid for; in this sense we have thus achieved static type checking.},
1305 booktitle = {Proceedings of the {Seventh} {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Conference} on {Functional} {Programming}},
1306 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1307 author = {Baars, Arthur I. and Swierstra, S. Doaitse},
1308 year = {2002},
1309 note = {event-place: Pittsburgh, PA, USA},
1310 keywords = {coercions, dynamic typing, Haskell, Leibnitz' rule, quantified types, static typing, type equality, typed interpreters},
1311 pages = {157--166},
1312 file = {Baars and Swierstra - 2002 - Typing dynamic typing.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/QSGVSTM4/Baars and Swierstra - 2002 - Typing dynamic typing.pdf:application/pdf},
1313 }
1314
1315 @inproceedings{young_adding_2021,
1316 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
1317 title = {On {Adding} {Pattern} {Matching} to {Haskell}-{Based} {Deeply} {Embedded} {Domain} {Specific} {Languages}},
1318 isbn = {978-3-030-67437-3},
1319 doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-67438-0_2},
1320 abstract = {Capturing control flow is the Achilles heel of Haskell-based deeply embedded domain specific languages. Rather than use the builtin control flow mechanisms, artificial control flow combinators are used instead. However, capturing traditional control flow in a deeply embedded domain specific language would support the writing of programs in a natural style by allowing the programmer to use the constructs that are already builtin to the base language, such as pattern matching and recursion. In this paper, we expand the capabilities of Haskell-based deep embeddings with a compiler extension for reifying conditionals and pattern matching. With this new support, the subset of Haskell that we use for expressing deeply embedded domain specific languages can be cleaner, Haskell-idiomatic, and more declarative in nature.},
1321 booktitle = {Practical {Aspects} of {Declarative} {Languages}: 23rd {International} {Symposium}, {PADL} 2021, {Copenhagen}, {Denmark}, {January} 18-19, 2021, {Proceedings}},
1322 publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
1323 author = {Young, David and Grebe, Mark and Gill, Andy},
1324 year = {2021},
1325 note = {event-place: Copenhagen, Denmark},
1326 pages = {20--36},
1327 }
1328
1329 @incollection{hinze_generic_2003,
1330 address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
1331 title = {Generic {Haskell}: {Practice} and {Theory}},
1332 isbn = {978-3-540-45191-4},
1333 abstract = {Generic Haskell is an extension of Haskell that supports the construction of generic programs. These lecture notes describe the basic constructs of Generic Haskell and highlight the underlying theory.},
1334 booktitle = {Generic {Programming}: {Advanced} {Lectures}},
1335 publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
1336 author = {Hinze, Ralf and Jeuring, Johan},
1337 editor = {Backhouse, Roland and Gibbons, Jeremy},
1338 year = {2003},
1339 doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-45191-4_1},
1340 pages = {1--56},
1341 file = {Hinze and Jeuring - Generic Haskell practice and theory.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/QDRNI5VB/Hinze and Jeuring - Generic Haskell practice and theory.pdf:application/pdf},
1342 }
1343
1344 @inproceedings{torrano_strictness_2005,
1345 address = {Bristol, UK},
1346 series = {Trends in {Functional} {Programming}},
1347 title = {Strictness {Analysis} and let-to-case {Transformation} using {Template} {Haskell}},
1348 volume = {6},
1349 isbn = {978-1-84150-176-5},
1350 booktitle = {Revised {Selected} {Papers} from the {Sixth} {Symposium} on {Trends} in {Functional} {Programming}, {TFP} 2005, {Tallinn}, {Estonia}, 23-24 {September} 2005},
1351 publisher = {Intellect},
1352 author = {Torrano, Carmen and Segura, Clara},
1353 editor = {Eekelen, Marko C. J. D. van},
1354 year = {2005},
1355 note = {event-place: Talinn, Estonia},
1356 pages = {429--442},
1357 file = {Torrano and Segura - Strictness Analysis and let-to-case Transformation.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/RIYW9WFT/Torrano and Segura - Strictness Analysis and let-to-case Transformation.pdf:application/pdf},
1358 }
1359
1360 @inproceedings{polak_automatic_2006,
1361 address = {Bristol, UK},
1362 series = {Trends in {Functional} {Programming}},
1363 title = {Automatic {Graphical} {User} {Interface} {Form} {Generation} {Using} {Template} {Haskell}},
1364 volume = {7},
1365 isbn = {978-1-84150-188-8},
1366 booktitle = {Revised {Selected} {Papers} from the {Seventh} {Symposium} on {Trends} in {Functional} {Programming}, {TFP} 2006, {Nottingham}, {United} {Kingdom}, 19-21 {April} 2006},
1367 publisher = {Intellect},
1368 author = {Polak, Gracjan and Jarosz, Janusz},
1369 editor = {Nilsson, Henrik},
1370 year = {2006},
1371 note = {event-place: Nottingham, UK},
1372 pages = {1--11},
1373 file = {Polak and Jarosz - Automatic Graphical User Interface Form Generation.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/8VK3D8JQ/Polak and Jarosz - Automatic Graphical User Interface Form Generation.pdf:application/pdf},
1374 }
1375
1376 @phdthesis{antonova_mtask_2022,
1377 address = {Nijmegen},
1378 type = {Bachelor's {Thesis}},
1379 title = {{mTask} {Semantics} and its {Comparison} to {TopHat}},
1380 language = {en},
1381 school = {Radboud University},
1382 author = {Antonova, Elina},
1383 year = {2022},
1384 file = {Crooijmans - 2021 - Reducing the Power Consumption of IoT Devices in T.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YIEQ97KK/Crooijmans - 2021 - Reducing the Power Consumption of IoT Devices in T.pdf:application/pdf},
1385 }
1386
1387 @misc{wadler_expression_1998,
1388 title = {The expression problem},
1389 url = {https://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/expression/expression.txt},
1390 language = {en},
1391 urldate = {2021-02-24},
1392 author = {Wadler, Philip},
1393 month = nov,
1394 year = {1998},
1395 note = {e-mail message, accessed on 2021-02-24},
1396 annote = {
1397
1398 },
1399 }
1400
1401 @misc{margaret_deuter_rhapsody_2015,
1402 address = {Oxford},
1403 edition = {Ninth edition},
1404 title = {Rhapsody},
1405 journal = {Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English},
1406 publisher = {Oxford University Press},
1407 author = {{A S Hornby}},
1408 editor = {{Margaret Deuter} and {Jennifer Bradbery} and {Joanna Turnbull}},
1409 year = {2015},
1410 }
1411
1412 @misc{wikipedia_contributors_rhapsody_2022,
1413 title = {Rhapsody (music){Wikipedia}, {The} {Free} {Encyclopedia}},
1414 url = {https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rhapsody_(music)\&oldid=1068385257},
1415 urldate = {2022-09-06},
1416 journal = {Wikipedia},
1417 author = {{Wikipedia contributors}},
1418 year = {2022},
1419 note = {accessed on: 2022-09-06},
1420 annote = {[Online; accessed 6-September-2022]},
1421 }
1422
1423 @incollection{backus_introduction_1990,
1424 address = {USA},
1425 title = {An {Introduction} to the {Programming} {Language} {FL}},
1426 isbn = {0-201-17236-4},
1427 booktitle = {Research {Topics} in {Functional} {Programming}},
1428 publisher = {Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc.},
1429 author = {Backus, John and Williams, John H. and Wimmers, Edward L.},
1430 year = {1990},
1431 pages = {219--247},
1432 }
1433
1434 @article{achten_ins_1995,
1435 title = {The ins and outs of {Clean} {I}/{O}},
1436 volume = {5},
1437 doi = {10.1017/S0956796800001258},
1438 number = {1},
1439 journal = {Journal of Functional Programming},
1440 author = {Achten, Peter and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
1441 year = {1995},
1442 note = {Publisher: Cambridge University Press},
1443 pages = {81--110},
1444 }
1445
1446 @inproceedings{peyton_jones_imperative_1993,
1447 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1448 series = {{POPL} '93},
1449 title = {Imperative {Functional} {Programming}},
1450 isbn = {0-89791-560-7},
1451 doi = {10.1145/158511.158524},
1452 abstract = {We present a new model, based on monads, for performing input/output in a non-strict, purely functional language. It is composable, extensible, efficient, requires no extensions to the type system, and extends smoothly to incorporate mixed-language working and in-place array updates.},
1453 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 20th {ACM} {SIGPLAN}-{SIGACT} {Symposium} on {Principles} of {Programming} {Languages}},
1454 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1455 author = {Peyton Jones, Simon L. and Wadler, Philip},
1456 year = {1993},
1457 note = {event-place: Charleston, South Carolina, USA},
1458 pages = {71--84},
1459 file = {Peyton Jones and Wadler - 1993 - Imperative Functional Programming.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/9DQ5V3N3/Peyton Jones and Wadler - 1993 - Imperative Functional Programming.pdf:application/pdf},
1460 }
1461
1462 @inproceedings{achten_high_1993,
1463 address = {London},
1464 title = {High {Level} {Specification} of {I}/{O} in {Functional} {Languages}},
1465 isbn = {978-1-4471-3215-8},
1466 abstract = {The interface with the outside world has always been one of the weakest points of functional languages. It is not easy to incorporate I/O without being allowed to do side-effects. Furthermore, functional languages allow redexes to be evaluated in any order while I/O generally has to be performed in a very specific order. In this paper we present a new solution for the I/O problem which we have incorporated in the language Concurrent Clean. Concurrent Clean offers a linear type system called Unique Types. It makes it possible to define functions with side-effects without violating the functional semantics. Now it is possible to change any object in the world in the way we wanted: e.g. arrays can be updated in-situ, arbitrary file manipulation is possible. We have used this powerful tool among others to create a library for window based I/O. Using an explicit environment passing scheme provides a high-level and elegant functional specification method for I/O, called Event I/O. Now the specification of I/O has become one of the strengths of functional languages: interactive programs written in Concurrent Clean are concise, easy to write and comprehend as well as efficient. The presented solution can in principle be applied for any other functional language as well provided that it actually uses graph rewriting semantics in the implementation.},
1467 booktitle = {Functional {Programming}, {Glasgow} 1992},
1468 publisher = {Springer London},
1469 author = {Achten, Peter and van Groningen, John and Plasmeijer, Rinus},
1470 editor = {Launchbury, John and Sansom, Patrick},
1471 year = {1993},
1472 pages = {1--17},
1473 file = {Achten et al. - 1993 - High Level Specification of IO in Functional Lang.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/4QVH7AYC/Achten et al. - 1993 - High Level Specification of IO in Functional Lang.pdf:application/pdf},
1474 }
1475
1476 @inproceedings{pickering_staged_2020,
1477 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1478 series = {Haskell 2020},
1479 title = {Staged {Sums} of {Products}},
1480 isbn = {978-1-4503-8050-8},
1481 doi = {10.1145/3406088.3409021},
1482 abstract = {Generic programming libraries have historically traded efficiency in return for convenience, and the generics-sop library is no exception. It offers a simple, uniform, representation of all datatypes precisely as a sum of products, making it easy to write generic functions. We show how to finally make generics-sop fast through the use of staging with Typed Template Haskell.},
1483 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
1484 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1485 author = {Pickering, Matthew and Löh, Andres and Wu, Nicolas},
1486 year = {2020},
1487 note = {event-place: Virtual Event, USA},
1488 keywords = {generic programming, staging},
1489 pages = {122--135},
1490 file = {Pickering et al. - 2020 - Staged Sums of Products.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/Q6ZWX4YP/Pickering et al. - 2020 - Staged Sums of Products.pdf:application/pdf},
1491 }
1492
1493 @article{xie_staging_2022,
1494 title = {Staging with {Class}: {A} {Specification} for {Typed} {Template} {Haskell}},
1495 volume = {6},
1496 doi = {10.1145/3498723},
1497 abstract = {Multi-stage programming using typed code quotation is an established technique for writing optimizing code generators with strong type-safety guarantees. Unfortunately, quotation in Haskell interacts poorly with type classes, making it difficult to write robust multi-stage programs. We study this unsound interaction and propose a resolution, staged type class constraints, which we formalize in a source calculus λ⇒ that elaborates into an explicit core calculus F. We show type soundness of both calculi, establishing that well-typed, well-staged source programs always elaborate to well-typed, well-staged core programs, and prove beta and eta rules for code quotations. Our design allows programmers to incorporate type classes into multi-stage programs with confidence. Although motivated by Haskell, it is also suitable as a foundation for other languages that support both overloading and quotation.},
1498 number = {POPL},
1499 journal = {Proc. ACM Program. Lang.},
1500 author = {Xie, Ningning and Pickering, Matthew and Löh, Andres and Wu, Nicolas and Yallop, Jeremy and Wang, Meng},
1501 month = jan,
1502 year = {2022},
1503 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
1504 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
1505 keywords = {Staging, Type Classes, Typed Template Haskell},
1506 file = {Xie et al. - 2022 - Staging with Class A Specification for Typed Temp.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/QGDB5YHR/Xie et al. - 2022 - Staging with Class A Specification for Typed Temp.pdf:application/pdf},
1507 }
1508
1509 @article{rhiger_type-safe_2009,
1510 title = {Type-safe pattern combinators},
1511 volume = {19},
1512 doi = {10.1017/S0956796808007089},
1513 number = {2},
1514 journal = {Journal of Functional Programming},
1515 author = {Rhiger, Morten},
1516 year = {2009},
1517 note = {Publisher: Cambridge University Press},
1518 pages = {145--156},
1519 file = {RHIGER - 2009 - Type-safe pattern combinators.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/D4N7PGBS/RHIGER - 2009 - Type-safe pattern combinators.pdf:application/pdf},
1520 }
1521
1522 @inproceedings{de_vries_true_2014,
1523 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1524 series = {{WGP} '14},
1525 title = {True {Sums} of {Products}},
1526 isbn = {978-1-4503-3042-8},
1527 doi = {10.1145/2633628.2633634},
1528 abstract = {We introduce the sum-of-products (SOP) view for datatype-generic programming (in Haskell). While many of the libraries that are commonly in use today represent datatypes as arbitrary combinations of binary sums and products, SOP reflects the structure of datatypes more faithfully: each datatype is a single n-ary sum, where each component of the sum is a single n-ary product. This representation turns out to be expressible accurately in GHC with today's extensions. The resulting list-like structure of datatypes allows for the definition of powerful high-level traversal combinators, which in turn encourage the definition of generic functions in a compositional and concise style. A major plus of the SOP view is that it allows to separate function-specific metadata from the main structural representation and recombining this information later.},
1529 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 10th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {Workshop} on {Generic} {Programming}},
1530 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1531 author = {de Vries, Edsko and Löh, Andres},
1532 year = {2014},
1533 note = {event-place: Gothenburg, Sweden},
1534 keywords = {lenses, datatype-generic programming, generic views, json, metadata, sums of products, universes},
1535 pages = {83--94},
1536 file = {de Vries and Löh - 2014 - True Sums of Products.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/QHT5IPQA/de Vries and Löh - 2014 - True Sums of Products.pdf:application/pdf},
1537 }
1538
1539 @article{willis_staged_2020,
1540 title = {Staged {Selective} {Parser} {Combinators}},
1541 volume = {4},
1542 doi = {10.1145/3409002},
1543 abstract = {Parser combinators are a middle ground between the fine control of hand-rolled parsers and the high-level almost grammar-like appearance of parsers created via parser generators. They also promote a cleaner, compositional design for parsers. Historically, however, they cannot match the performance of their counterparts. This paper describes how to compile parser combinators into parsers of hand-written quality. This is done by leveraging the static information present in the grammar by representing it as a tree. However, in order to exploit this information, it will be necessary to drop support for monadic computation since this generates dynamic structure. Selective functors can help recover lost functionality in the absence of monads, and the parser tree can be partially evaluated with staging. This is implemented in a library called Parsley.},
1544 number = {ICFP},
1545 journal = {Proc. ACM Program. Lang.},
1546 author = {Willis, Jamie and Wu, Nicolas and Pickering, Matthew},
1547 month = aug,
1548 year = {2020},
1549 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
1550 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
1551 keywords = {combinators, meta-programming, parsers},
1552 file = {Willis et al. - 2020 - Staged Selective Parser Combinators.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/RCD842QK/Willis et al. - 2020 - Staged Selective Parser Combinators.pdf:application/pdf},
1553 }
1554
1555 @inproceedings{pickering_multi-stage_2019,
1556 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1557 series = {Haskell 2019},
1558 title = {Multi-{Stage} {Programs} in {Context}},
1559 isbn = {978-1-4503-6813-1},
1560 doi = {10.1145/3331545.3342597},
1561 abstract = {Cross-stage persistence is an essential aspect of multi-stage programming that allows a value defined in one stage to be available in another. However, difficulty arises when implicit information held in types, type classes and implicit parameters needs to be persisted. Without a careful treatment of such implicit information—which are pervasive in Haskell—subtle yet avoidable bugs lurk beneath the surface. This paper demonstrates that in multi-stage programming care must be taken when representing quoted terms so that important implicit information is kept in context and not discarded. The approach is formalised with a type-system, and an implementation in GHC is presented that fixes problems of the previous incarnation.},
1562 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 12th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Symposium} on {Haskell}},
1563 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1564 author = {Pickering, Matthew and Wu, Nicolas and Kiss, Csongor},
1565 year = {2019},
1566 note = {event-place: Berlin, Germany},
1567 keywords = {metaprogramming, staging, implicits},
1568 pages = {71--84},
1569 file = {Pickering et al. - 2019 - Multi-Stage Programs in Context.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/3EW7FM44/Pickering et al. - 2019 - Multi-Stage Programs in Context.pdf:application/pdf},
1570 }
1571
1572 @article{pickering_specification_2021,
1573 title = {A {Specification} for {Typed} {Template} {Haskell}},
1574 volume = {abs/2112.03653},
1575 doi = {10.48550/arXiv.2112.03653},
1576 journal = {CoRR},
1577 author = {Pickering, Matthew and Löh, Andres and Wu, Nicolas},
1578 year = {2021},
1579 note = {arXiv: 2112.03653},
1580 file = {Pickering et al. - 2021 - A Specification for Typed Template Haskell.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YBTN4DLK/Pickering et al. - 2021 - A Specification for Typed Template Haskell.pdf:application/pdf},
1581 }
1582
1583 @inproceedings{folmer_high-level_2022,
1584 address = {Cham},
1585 title = {High-{Level} {Synthesis} of {Digital} {Circuits} from {Template} {Haskell} and {SDF}-{AP}},
1586 isbn = {978-3-031-15074-6},
1587 abstract = {Functional languages as input specifications for HLS-tools allow to specify data dependencies but do not contain a notion of time nor execution order. In this paper, we propose a method to add this notion to the functional description using the dataflow model SDF-AP. SDF-AP consists of patterns that express consumption and production that we can use to enforce resource usage. We created an HLS-tool that can synthesize parallel hardware, both data and control path, based on the repetition, expressed in Higher-Order Functions, combined with specified SDF-AP patterns.},
1588 booktitle = {Embedded {Computer} {Systems}: {Architectures}, {Modeling}, and {Simulation}},
1589 publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
1590 author = {Folmer, H. H. and Groote, R. de and Bekooij, M. J. G.},
1591 editor = {Orailoglu, Alex and Reichenbach, Marc and Jung, Matthias},
1592 year = {2022},
1593 pages = {3--27},
1594 file = {Folmer et al. - 2022 - High-Level Synthesis of Digital Circuits from Temp.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/5JSW6MAL/Folmer et al. - 2022 - High-Level Synthesis of Digital Circuits from Temp.pdf:application/pdf},
1595 }
1596
1597 @article{materzok_generating_2022,
1598 title = {Generating {Circuits} with {Generators}},
1599 volume = {6},
1600 doi = {10.1145/3549821},
1601 abstract = {The most widely used languages and methods used for designing digital hardware fall into two rough categories. One of them, register transfer level (RTL), requires specifying each and every component in the designed circuit. This gives the designer full control, but burdens the designer with many trivial details. The other, the high-level synthesis (HLS) method, allows the designer to abstract the details of hardware away and focus on the problem being solved. This method however cannot be used for a class of hardware design problems because the circuit's clock is also abstracted away. We present YieldFSM, a hardware description language that uses the generator abstraction to represent clock-level timing in a digital circuit. It represents a middle ground between the RTL and HLS approaches: the abstraction level is higher than in RTL, but thanks to explicit information about clock-level timing, it can be used in applications where RTL is traditionally used. We also present the YieldFSM compiler, which uses methods developed by the functional programming community – including continuation-passsing style translation and defunctionalization – to translate YieldFSM programs to Mealy machines. It is implemented using Template Haskell and the Clash functional hardware description language. We show that this approach leads to short and conceptually simple hardware descriptions.},
1602 number = {ICFP},
1603 journal = {Proc. ACM Program. Lang.},
1604 author = {Materzok, Marek},
1605 month = aug,
1606 year = {2022},
1607 note = {Place: New York, NY, USA
1608 Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery},
1609 keywords = {circuit synthesis, generators, hardware description languages},
1610 file = {Materzok - 2022 - Generating Circuits with Generators.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/LH4Q8J73/Materzok - 2022 - Generating Circuits with Generators.pdf:application/pdf},
1611 }
1612
1613 @article{egi_embedding_2022,
1614 title = {Embedding {Non}-linear {Pattern} {Matching} with {Backtracking} for {Non}-free {Data} {Types} into {Haskell}},
1615 volume = {40},
1616 issn = {1882-7055},
1617 doi = {10.1007/s00354-022-00177-z},
1618 abstract = {Pattern matching is an important language construct for data abstraction. Many pattern-match extensions have been developed for extending the range of data types to which pattern matching is applicable. Among them, the pattern-match system proposed by Egi and Nishiwaki features practical pattern matching for non-free data types by providing a user-customizable non-linear pattern-match facility with backtracking. However, they implemented their proposal only in dynamically typed programming languages, and there were no proposals that allow programmers to benefit from both static type systems and expressive pattern matching. This paper proposes a method for implementing this pattern-match facility by meta-programming in Haskell. There are two technical challenges: (i) we need to design a set of typing rules for the pattern-match facility; (ii) we need to embed these typing rules in Haskell to make types of the pattern-match expressions inferable by the Haskell type system. We propose a set of typing rules and show that several GHC extensions, such as multi-parameter type classes, datatype promotion, GADTs, existential types, and view patterns, play essential roles for embedding these typing rules into Haskell. The implementation has already been distributed as a Haskell library miniEgison via Hackage.},
1619 number = {2},
1620 journal = {New Generation Computing},
1621 author = {Egi, Satoshi and Kawata, Akira and Kori, Mayuko and Ogawa, Hiromi},
1622 month = jul,
1623 year = {2022},
1624 pages = {481--506},
1625 file = {Egi et al. - 2022 - Embedding Non-linear Pattern Matching with Backtra.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/PXT9L9Z4/Egi et al. - 2022 - Embedding Non-linear Pattern Matching with Backtra.pdf:application/pdf},
1626 }
1627
1628 @inproceedings{blanchette_liquid_2022,
1629 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1630 series = {Haskell 2022},
1631 title = {Liquid {Proof} {Macros}},
1632 isbn = {978-1-4503-9438-3},
1633 doi = {10.1145/3546189.3549921},
1634 abstract = {Liquid Haskell is a popular verifier for Haskell programs, leveraging the power of SMT solvers to ease users' burden of proof. However, this power does not come without a price: convincing Liquid Haskell that a program is correct often necessitates giving hints to the underlying solver, which can be a tedious and verbose process that sometimes requires intricate knowledge of Liquid Haskell's inner workings. In this paper, we present Liquid Proof Macros, an extensible metaprogramming technique and framework for simplifying the development of Liquid Haskell proofs. We describe how to leverage Template Haskell to generate Liquid Haskell proof terms, via a tactic-inspired DSL interface for more concise and user-friendly proofs, and we demonstrate the capabilities of this framework by automating a wide variety of proofs from an existing Liquid Haskell benchmark.},
1635 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 15th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Haskell} {Symposium}},
1636 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1637 author = {Blanchette, Henry and Vazou, Niki and Lampropoulos, Leonidas},
1638 year = {2022},
1639 note = {event-place: Ljubljana, Slovenia},
1640 keywords = {Liquid Haskell, Proof Macros, Tactics},
1641 pages = {27--38},
1642 file = {Blanchette et al. - 2022 - Liquid Proof Macros.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/YXPCWQNI/Blanchette et al. - 2022 - Liquid Proof Macros.pdf:application/pdf},
1643 }
1644
1645 @phdthesis{baaij_digital_2015,
1646 address = {Netherlands},
1647 type = {{PhD} {Thesis}},
1648 title = {Digital circuit in {C}\${\textbackslash}lambda\${aSH}: functional specifications and type-directed synthesis},
1649 abstract = {Over the last three decades, the number of transistors used in microchips has increased by three orders of magnitude, from millions to billions. The productivity of the designers, however, lags behind. Managing to implement complex algorithms, while keeping non-functional properties within desired bounds, and thoroughly verifying the design against its specification, are the main difficulties in circuit design. As a motivation for our work we make a qualitative analysis of the tools available to circuit designers. Here we see that progress has been slow, and that the same techniques have been used for over 20 years. We claim that functional languages can be used to raise the abstraction level in circuit design. Especially higher-order functional languages, where functions are first-class and can be manipulated by other functions, offer a single abstraction mechanism that can capture many design patterns. This thesis explores the idea of using the functional language Haskell directly as a hardware specification language, and move beyond the limitations of embedded languages. Additionally, we can use normal functions from existing Haskell libraries to model the behaviour of our circuits. This thesis describes the inner workings of our CλaSH compiler, which translates the aforementioned circuit descriptions written in Haskell to low-level descriptions in VHDL. The challenge then becomes the reduction of the higher-level abstractions in the descriptions to a form where synthesis is feasible. This thesis describes a term rewrite system (with bound variables) to achieve this reduction. We prove that this term rewrite system always reduces a polymorphic, higher-order circuit description to a synthesisable variant. Even when descriptions use high-level abstractions, the CλaSH compiler can synthesize efficient circuits. Case studies show that circuits designed in Haskell, and synthesized with the C?aSH compiler, are on par with hand-written VHDL, in both area and gate propagation delay. This thesis thus shows the merits of using a modern functional language for circuit design. The advanced type system and higher-order functions allow us to design circuits that have the desired property of being correct-by-construction. Finally, our synthesis approach enables us to derive efficient circuits from descriptions that use high-level abstractions.},
1650 language = {Undefined},
1651 school = {University of Twente},
1652 author = {Baaij, C. P. R.},
1653 month = jan,
1654 year = {2015},
1655 doi = {10.3990/1.9789036538039},
1656 note = {ISBN: 978-90-365-3803-9},
1657 keywords = {Haskell, Digital Circuits, EC Grant Agreement nr.: FP7/248465, EC Grant Agreement nr.: FP7/610686, EWI-23939, FPGA, Functional Programming, Hardware, IR-93962, Lambda calculus, METIS-308711, Rewrite Systems},
1658 annote = {eemcs-eprint-23939 },
1659 file = {Baaij - 2015 - Digital circuit in CλaSH functional specification.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/MYJ33ISL/Baaij - 2015 - Digital circuit in CλaSH functional specification.pdf:application/pdf},
1660 }
1661
1662 @inproceedings{mcdonell_embedded_2022,
1663 address = {New York, NY, USA},
1664 series = {Haskell 2022},
1665 title = {Embedded {Pattern} {Matching}},
1666 isbn = {978-1-4503-9438-3},
1667 doi = {10.1145/3546189.3549917},
1668 abstract = {Haskell is a popular choice for hosting deeply embedded languages. A recurring challenge for these embeddings is how to seamlessly integrate user defined algebraic data types. In particular, one important, convenient, and expressive feature for creating and inspecting data—pattern matching—is not directly available on embedded terms. We present a novel technique, embedded pattern matching, which enables a natural and user friendly embedding of user defined algebraic data types into the embedded language, and allows programmers to pattern match on terms in the embedded language in much the same way they would in the host language.},
1669 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 15th {ACM} {SIGPLAN} {International} {Haskell} {Symposium}},
1670 publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
1671 author = {McDonell, Trevor L. and Meredith, Joshua D. and Keller, Gabriele},
1672 year = {2022},
1673 note = {event-place: Ljubljana, Slovenia},
1674 keywords = {Haskell, algebraic data types, embedded languages, pattern matching},
1675 pages = {123--136},
1676 file = {2108.13114.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/AJAT8AXI/2108.13114.pdf:application/pdf},
1677 }
1678
1679 @phdthesis{krishnamurthi_linguistic_2001,
1680 address = {Houston, USA},
1681 type = {{PhD} {Thesis}},
1682 title = {Linguistic reuse},
1683 school = {Rice University},
1684 author = {Krishnamurthi, Shriram},
1685 year = {2001},
1686 file = {Krishnamurthi - 2001 - Linguistic reuse.PDF:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/LSKHFPIS/Krishnamurthi - 2001 - Linguistic reuse.PDF:application/pdf},
1687 }
1688
1689 @misc{ashton_internet_1999,
1690 address = {London, UK},
1691 type = {Presentation},
1692 title = {Internet of {Things}},
1693 author = {Ashton, Kevin},
1694 year = {1999},
1695 note = {Presentation at Proctor \& Gamble},
1696 }
1697
1698 @article{ashton_that_2009,
1699 title = {That ‘{Internet} of {Things}{Thing}},
1700 volume = {22},
1701 number = {7},
1702 journal = {RFID journal},
1703 author = {Ashton, Kevin},
1704 year = {2009},
1705 note = {Publisher: Hauppauge, New York},
1706 pages = {97--114},
1707 file = {Ashton - 2009 - That ‘Internet of Things’ Thing.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/SJ33G6VR/Ashton - 2009 - That ‘Internet of Things’ Thing.pdf:application/pdf},
1708 }
1709
1710 @phdthesis{van_gemert_task_2022,
1711 address = {Nijmegen},
1712 type = {Bachelor's {Thesis}},
1713 title = {Task {Oriented} {Programming} in {LUA}},
1714 language = {en},
1715 school = {Radboud University},
1716 author = {van Gemert, Dante},
1717 year = {2022},
1718 file = {van Gemert - 2022 - Task Oriented Programming in LUA.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/UQHAWT83/van Gemert - 2022 - Task Oriented Programming in LUA.pdf:application/pdf},
1719 }
1720
1721 @misc{lijnse_toppyt_2022,
1722 title = {Toppyt},
1723 url = {https://gitlab.com/baslijnse/toppyt},
1724 urldate = {2022-10-07},
1725 author = {Lijnse, Bas},
1726 year = {2022},
1727 }
1728
1729 @misc{lubbers_htask_2022,
1730 title = {hTask},
1731 url = {https://gitlab.com/mlubbers/acsds},
1732 urldate = {2022-10-17},
1733 author = {Lubbers, Mart},
1734 year = {2022},
1735 }
1736
1737 @article{sun_compositional_2022,
1738 title = {Compositional {Embeddings} of {Domain}-{Specific} {Languages}},
1739 volume = {6},
1740 doi = {10.1145/3563294},
1741 language = {en},
1742 number = {OOPSLA2},
1743 journal = {Proc. ACM Program. Lang.},
1744 author = {Sun, Yaozhu and Dhandhania, Utkarsh and Oliveira, Bruno C. d. S.},
1745 year = {2022},
1746 pages = {34},
1747 file = {Sun and Dhandhania - Compositional Embeddings of Domain-Specific Langua.pdf:/home/mrl/.local/share/zotero/storage/Y4GADQFP/Sun and Dhandhania - Compositional Embeddings of Domain-Specific Langua.pdf:application/pdf},
1748 }