Dear Ekaterina (and caml-list), I am considering PPDP for a submission¹ but, for me personally, the ability to retain my author rights and have the paper published as open-access at a reasonable price (cost of operation) is a deciding factor. There is little information on the PPDP website or in the CFP besides the fact that it's ACM-published; do I correctly understand that authors wishing to retain their full rights over their work would have to pay the standard ACM author-processing charge of $900? ¹: actually two submissions. Best On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 12:38 PM Ekaterina Komendantskaya < komendantskaya@gmail.com> wrote: > FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS -- PPDP 2019 > > 21st International Symposium on > > Principles and Practice of Declarative Programming > > 7–9 October 2019, Porto, Portugal > > Collocated with FM'19 > > http://ppdp2019.macs.hw.ac.uk > > ====================================================================== > > Important Dates > > --------------- > > Title and abstract registration 26 April 2019 (AoE) > > Paper submission 3 May 2019 (AoE) > > Rebuttal period (48 hours) 3 June 2019 (AoE) > > Author notification 14 June 2019 > > Final paper version 15 July 2019 > > Conference 7–9 October 2019 > > About PPDP > > ---------- > > The PPDP 2019 symposium brings together researchers from the declarative > > programming communities, including those working in the functional, logic, > > answer-set, and constraint handling programming paradigms. The goal is to > > stimulate research in the use of logical formalisms and methods for > analyzing, > > performing, specifying, and reasoning about computations, including > mechanisms > > for concurrency, security, static analysis, and verification. > > > Invited Speakers > > ---------------- > > Amal Ahmed Northeastern University, USA > > Title: TBA > > Naoki Kobayashi The University of Tokyo, Japan > > Title: 10 Years of the Higher-Order Model Checking Project > > Scope > > ----- > > Submissions are invited on all topics related to declarative programming, > from > > principles to practice, from foundations to applications. Topics of > interest > > include, but are not limited to > > - Language Design: domain-specific languages; interoperability; > concurrency, > > parallelism and distribution; modules; probabilistic languages; functional > > languages; reactive languages; database languages; knowledge > representation > > languages; languages with objects; language extensions for tabulation; > metaprogramming. > > - Implementations: abstract machines; interpreters; compilation; > compile-time > > and run-time optimization; memory management. > > - Foundations: types; logical frameworks; monads and effects; semantics. > > - Analysis and Transformation: partial evaluation; abstract > interpretation; > > control flow; data flow; information flow; termination analysis; resource > > analysis; type inference and type checking; verification; validation; > > debugging; testing. > > - Tools and Applications: programming and proof environments; verification > > tools; case studies in proof assistants or interactive theorem provers; > > certification; novel applications of declarative programming inside and > > outside of CS; declarative programming pearls; practical experience > reports > > and industrial application; education. > > For further information, please visit: > > http://ppdp2019.macs.hw.ac.uk > > > > > >