SPLASH 2023
Sun 22 - Fri 27 October 2023 Cascais, Portugal

Onward! Essays is looking for clear and compelling pieces of writing about topics important to the software community. An essay can be long or short.

An essay can be an exploration of the topic and its impact, or a story about the circumstances of its creation; it can present a personal view of what is, explore a terrain, or lead the reader in an act of discovery; it can be a philosophical digression or a deep analysis. It can describe a personal journey, perhaps the one the author took to reach an understanding of the topic. The subject area—software, programming, and programming languages—should be interpreted broadly and can include the relationship of software to human endeavors, or its philosophical, sociological, psychological, historical, or anthropological underpinnings.

Dates
Tracks
You're viewing the program in a time zone which is different from your device's time zone change time zone

Wed 25 Oct

Displayed time zone: Lisbon change

09:00 - 10:30
KeynoteOnward! Papers at Room VII
Chair(s): Tijs van der Storm CWI & University of Groningen
09:00
90m
Keynote
Creating a learnable and inclusive programming languageKeynote
Onward! Papers
K: Felienne Hermans Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
11:00 - 12:30
Beyond Text? Onward! Papers at Room VII
Chair(s): L. Thomas van Binsbergen University of Amsterdam
11:00
30m
Talk
Time-awareness in Object-exploration Tools: Toward In Situ Omniscient DebuggingRemote
Onward! Papers
Christoph Thiede Hasso Plattner Institute, University of Potsdam, Germany, Marcel Taeumel University of Potsdam; Hasso Plattner Institute, Robert Hirschfeld University of Potsdam; Hasso Plattner Institute
Link to publication DOI
11:30
30m
Talk
Code Merging Using Transformations and Member Identity
Onward! Papers
André R. Teles University Institute of Lisbon, André L. Santos University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal
12:00
30m
Talk
Scalable Spreadsheet-driven End-User Applications with Incremental Computation
Onward! Papers
Sean Hadar Technion, Shachar Itzhaky Technion
14:00 - 15:30
Beyond Language?Onward! Papers at Room VII
Chair(s): Alex Potanin Australian National University
14:00
30m
Talk
Could No-Code be Code? -- Toward a No-Code Programming Language for Citizen Developers
Onward! Papers
David H. Lorenz Open University of Israel, Assaf Zeira Too Software
Link to publication DOI Pre-print
14:30
30m
Talk
Toward Programming Languages for Reasoning -- Humans, Symbolic Systems, and AI Agents
Onward! Papers
Mark Marron University of Kentucky
15:00
30m
Talk
Trustworthy Formal Natural Language Specifications
Onward! Papers
Colin Gordon Drexel University, Sergey Matskevich Drexel University, USA
16:00 - 17:30
Essays 1Onward! Essays at Room VII
Chair(s): Matthew Dinmore Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
16:00
45m
Talk
Will code remain a relevant user interface for end-user programming with generative AI models?
Onward! Essays
Advait Sarkar Microsoft Research and University of Cambridge
Link to publication DOI
16:45
45m
Talk
programmingLanguage as Language;
Onward! Essays
James Noble Research & Programming, Robert Biddle Carleton University
Link to publication DOI File Attached

Thu 26 Oct

Displayed time zone: Lisbon change

11:00 - 12:30
Beyond Programming? Onward! Papers at Room VII
Chair(s): Riemer van Rozen CWI
11:00
30m
Talk
Cloning And Beyond: A Quantum Solution to Duplicate Code
Onward! Papers
Samyak Jhaveri UCI, Alberto Krone-Martins UC Irvine, Crista Lopes University of California, Irvine
11:30
30m
Talk
Towards an Industrial Stateful Software Rejuvenation Toolchain Using Model LearningRemote
Onward! Papers
Mathijs Schuts Philips; Radboud University Nijmegen, Jozef Hooman TNO; Radboud University Nijmegen
12:00
30m
Talk
Concept-Centric Software Development: An Experience Report
Onward! Papers
Peter Wilczynski Palantir Technologies, Taylor Gregoire-Wright Independent consultant, Daniel Jackson MIT
14:00 - 15:30
Essays 2Onward! Essays at Room VII
Chair(s): James Noble Research & Programming
14:00
45m
Talk
Sharing a Perspective on the lambda-Calculus
Onward! Essays
Beniamino Accattoli Inria & Ecole Polytechnique
Link to publication DOI
14:45
45m
Talk
Whither Problem-Solving Environments?
Onward! Essays
Matthew Dinmore Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
Link to publication DOI File Attached

Call for Essays

Scope

Onward! Essays is looking for clear and compelling pieces of writing about topics important to the software community. An essay can be long or short.

An essay can be an exploration of the topic and its impact, or a story about the circumstances of its creation; it can present a personal view of what is, explore a terrain, or lead the reader in an act of discovery; it can be a philosophical digression or a deep analysis. It can describe a personal journey, perhaps the one the author took to reach an understanding of the topic. The subject area—software, programming, and programming languages—should be interpreted broadly and can include the relationship of software to human endeavors, or its philosophical, sociological, psychological, historical, or anthropological underpinnings.

Onward! Essays invites not only experienced academics but graduate students to submit essays with constructive criticism of current software development technology and practices, as well as presentations of ideas that could change the realm of software development. Practitioners who are dissatisfied—or satisfied!—with the state of our art are also encouraged to share insights about how to reform—or improve—software development, perhaps by presenting detailed examples of a new approach, demonstrating concrete benefits and potential risks.

Onward! Essays is not looking for research-as-usual papers—an essay doesn’t contain definitive validation; however, regardless of its form or topic, the essay must have “substance.” An essay may or may not have a conclusion, but it must provide some insight or compelling argument, either directly or indirectly stated; the reader should be left—perhaps after some reflection—in no doubt about the claimed insight or argument. The key characteristic of a successful essay is that it shows a keen mind coming to grips with a tough or intriguing problem in such a way that, as Virginia Woolf wrote, “it explains much and tells much.”

Long essays are fine, but essayists are encouraged to consider the virtues of short essays that deliver their points sharply and with precision. Essays as short as a single page are welcome at Onward! Essays. Short essays will be accorded the same status at Onward! Essays as longer ones.

Essays Selection

Onward! essays are peer-reviewed in a single-blind manner. Accepted essays will appear in the Onward! Proceedings in the ACM Digital Library. Submissions will be judged on the potential impact of the ideas and the quality of the presentation.

The Onward! Essays track follows a two-phase review process. This enables us to welcome contributions that contain promising material and have the potential to meet the conference’s standards, but which may fall short of this in their initial form. At the end of the first round, all essays will be either accepted normally, subject to revisions, or rejected outright. The authors of essays in the second category will get around one month to complete the requested revisions, at which point the original reviewers will decide on final acceptance or rejection. As usual, essays in the first category will also receive feedback from the reviewers, and the corresponding authors will be required to take that feedback into account for the final submission.

In order to facilitate the second round of review, authors of essays in need of major revisions will be requested to accompany their second submission with a cover letter mapping the requested revisions to specific parts of the essay. The program committee will use the cover letter and the revised submission to arrive at a final decision.

The second phase will only be used to elevate promising work to the conference’s standard, not to require additional work on essays already deemed up-to-standard.

Instructions for Authors

Essays should use the ACM SIGPLAN Conference acmart Format, with the sigplan and review \documentclass options. This produces two-column, 10pt files. If you use LaTeX or Word, please use the provided ACM SIGPLAN acmart templates provided here. All submissions should be in PDF format. Authors need to ensure their submissions are legible when printed on a black and white printer and that colors remain distinct and font sizes are legible.

The following list describes the typical expectations for a submission.:

  • All submitted essays should conform to the formatting instructions unless there is a reason founded in the nature of the essay to do otherwise; in this case, please preface the essay with the reasons for the variation.

  • Essays must describe unpublished work that is not currently submitted for publication elsewhere as described by SIGPLAN’s Republication Policy. Submitters should also be aware of ACM’s Policy and Procedures on Plagiarism.

  • There is no limit on the length of submissions, but note that reviewers will not be obligated to read beyond the end of their interest. The main part of the final version should not exceed 14 pages unless there are two program committee members who believe the content requires a longer essay, and the quality of the writing is likely to sustain readers. If otherwise your final version is longer than those 25 pages, you must re-submit it before the final deadline so the program committee can reëxamine it. No limit is imposed on the bibliographic section or other appendices.

However, given the nature of the Onward! Essays track, we understand that authors of certain submissions might have special requirements. For example, if a contribution might require a different media (video, interactive presentation, or an art piece) or if there are any other concerns, please contact the PC Chair (or, if you prefer, a different member of the PC) to discuss the issue.

Submissions

Essays can be submitted via the Onward! Essays 2023 submissions page.

Questions? Use the SPLASH Onward! Essays contact form.