ECOOP 2009 - Object-Oriented Programming, 23rd European Conference, Genoa, Italy, July 6-10, 2009. Proceedings
暂无分享,去创建一个
Keynote 1.- Classes, Jim, But Not as We Know Them - Type Classes in Haskell: What, Why, and Whither.- Types, Frameworks and Modelling.- Coinductive Type Systems for Object-Oriented Languages.- Checking Framework Interactions with Relationships.- COPE - Automating Coupled Evolution of Metamodels and Models.- Aliasing and Transactions.- Making Sense of Large Heaps.- Scaling CFL-Reachability-Based Points-To Analysis Using Context-Sensitive Must-Not-Alias Analysis.- NePaLTM: Design and Implementation of Nested Parallelism for Transactional Memory Systems.- Access Control and Verification.- Implicit Dynamic Frames: Combining Dynamic Frames and Separation Logic.- Fine-Grained Access Control with Object-Sensitive Roles.- Practical API Protocol Checking with Access Permissions.- Modularity.- Adding State and Visibility Control to Traits Using Lexical Nesting.- Featherweight Jigsaw: A Minimal Core Calculus for Modular Composition of Classes.- Modular Visitor Components.- Mining and Extracting.- Debugging Method Names.- MAPO: Mining and Recommending API Usage Patterns.- Supporting Framework Use via Automatically Extracted Concept-Implementation Templates.- Refactoring.- Stepping Stones over the Refactoring Rubicon.- Program Metamorphosis.- From Public to Private to Absent: Refactoring Java Programs under Constrained Accessibility.- Keynote 2.- Java on 1000 Cores: Tales of Hardware/Software Co-design.- Concurrency, Exceptions and Initialization.- Loci: Simple Thread-Locality for Java.- Failboxes: Provably Safe Exception Handling.- Are We Ready for a Safer Construction Environment?.- Type-Based Object Immutability with Flexible Initialization.- Concurrency and Distribution.- Security Monitor Inlining for Multithreaded Java.- EventJava: An Extension of Java for Event Correlation.- Remote Batch Invocation for Compositional Object Services.- ECOOP 2008 Banquet Speech.- to: The Myths of Object-Orientation.- The Myths of Object-Orientation.