Slides (GHC_Sept_18.pdf) | 2.15MiB |
Simon Peyton Jones, MA, MBCS, CEng, graduated from Trinity College Cambridge in 1980. After two years in industry, he spent seven years as a lecturer at University College London, and nine years as a professor at Glasgow University, before moving to Microsoft Research (Cambridge) in 1998. His main research interest is in functional programming languages, their implementation, and their application. He has led a succession of research projects focused around the design and implementation of production-quality functional-language systems for both uniprocessors and parallel machines. He was a key contributor to the design of the now-standard functional language Haskell, and is the lead designer of the widely-used Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC). He has written two textbooks about the implementation of functional languages.
More generally, he is interested in language design, rich type systems, software component architectures, compiler technology, code generation, runtime systems, virtual machines, and garbage collection. He is particularly motivated by direct use of principled theory to practical language design and implementation – that’s one reason he loves functional programming so much.
Sun 23 SepDisplayed time zone: Guadalajara, Mexico City, Monterrey change
10:20 - 12:00 | |||
10:20 25mTalk | GHC Update HIW Simon Peyton Jones Microsoft, UK File Attached | ||
10:45 25mTalk | Source Plugins HIW Matthew Pickering University of Bristol Media Attached | ||
11:10 25mTalk | Generalized Abstract GHC.Generics HIW Ryan Scott Indiana University at Bloomington, USA File Attached | ||
11:35 8mTalk | Lightning talk: CodeWorld: Teaching Haskell and mathematics to children HIW Chris Smith Google, USA | ||
11:43 8mTalk | Lightning talk: CoreSpec: Verifying GHC with hs-to-coq HIW File Attached | ||
11:51 9mTalk | Lightning talk: The trick which makes exceptions-0.10.0 possible HIW Samuel Gélineau SimSpace Media Attached |