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Papers We Love Remote Meetup #2 - Philip Wadler

About This Webinar

This is the second meeting of the Papers We Love Remote Chapter: https://github.com/papers-we-love/remote-pwl. We'll also be posting the final video on the PWL Youtube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/user/PapersWeLove.

Philip Wadler will be presenting the paper "Definitional Interpreters for Higher-Order Programming Languages.", available here:

- http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/papers-we-love/reynolds-definitional-interpreters-1972.pdf (1972)

- http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/papers-we-love/reynolds-definitional-interpreters-1998.pdf (1998)

- http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/papers-we-love/reynolds-definitional-interpreters-revisited.pdf (Definitional Interpreters Revisited)

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Papers We Love (http://paperswelove.org) is a repository of academic computer science papers and a community who loves reading them.

We'll be using papers-we-love's curated repository - https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love. Please contribute by adding PR's for papers, code, and/or links to other repositories.

The PWL Remote Chapter follows the Code of Conduct, https://github.com/papers-we-love/remote-pwl/blob/master/code-of-conduct.md, set forth by all PWL charters.

Agenda
Categories:
SCIENCE & TECH
Who can view: Everyone
Webinar Price: Free
Webinar ID: 90a654be8398
Featured Presenters
Webinar hosting presenter Philip Wadler
Professor of Theoretical Computer Science, University of Edinburgh
Philip Wadler is Professor of Theoretical Computer Science at the University of Edinburgh. He is an ACM Fellow and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, past chair of ACM SIGPLAN, past holder of a Royal Society-Wolfson Research Merit Fellowship, and a winner of the POPL Most Influential Paper Award. Previously, he worked or studied at Stanford, Xerox Parc, CMU, Oxford, Chalmers, Glasgow, Bell Labs, and Avaya Labs, and visited as a guest professor in Copenhagen, Sydney, and Paris. He has an h-index of 60, with more than 20,000 citations to his work according to Google Scholar. He contributed to the designs of Haskell, Java, and XQuery, and is a co-author of Introduction to Functional Programming (Prentice Hall, 1988), XQuery from the Experts (Addison Wesley, 2004) and Generics and Collections in Java (O'Reilly, 2006). He has delivered invited talks in locations ranging from Aizu to Zurich.
Attended (91)
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