Call for Papers
A poster announcing the EOOLT 2019 can be downloaded here.Important dates
- Extended submission deadline: August 26
Submission deadline: August 5- Author notification: September 17
Author notification: September 10- Camera-ready: October 8
- Workshop: November 5
Scope
Contributions to this workshop focus on methodological aspects and describe new solutions for the design and use of equation-based languages. In addition to full contributions, shorter work-in-progress papers are welcome, offering an opportunity to discuss current approaches within the community.
Typical themes of the EOOLT workshop range from language design via modeling aspects to simulation code:
- Design aspects of equation-based languages and their formal semantics
- Relation to other languages such as functional reactive programming (FRP) or synchronous languages
- Verification, type systems, and early static checking
- Discrete-event and hybrid system modeling
- Acausality/non-causality and its role in model reusability
- Multi-resolution / multi-scale modeling using EOO languages
- Model-driven development related to EOO languages
- Equation-based modeling in the frame of system engineering
- Reflection and meta-programming
- Environments for modeling, simulation and debugging
- Mathematical formalisms for simulation semantics
- Code generation for real-time systems, embedded system, multi-core platforms, and distributed systems
- Tools for analyzing or optimizing equation-based models
Submission
Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit the following contributions:- Full length research papers: up to 10 pages for consideration by the program committee. Papers are welcome that offer presentations and discussions of existing languages and tools, their capabilities and limitations; reports on practical experience; demonstrations of languages, tools, ideas, and concepts; positions related to relevant questions; and discussion topics.
- Work-in-progress papers: up to 4 pages for consideration by the program committee. Papers are welcome that offer presentations and discussions of work-in-progress and problem statements that can be thoroughly discussed during the workshop.
All submissions must describe original research work, not previously published or submitted for publication elsewhere. The program committee will evaluate the papers' technical contributions, relevance, originality, correctness, and clarity.
More information about submission and publication will be provided soon.