CANCELLATION NOTICE: Unfortunately, ProWeb’22 has been cancelled this year. We will be back in 2023 for a new edition of ProWeb.
Full-fledged web applications have become ubiquitous on desktop and mobile devices alike. Whereas “responsive” web applications already offered a more desktop-like experience, there is an increasing demand for “rich” web applications (RIAs) that offer collaborative and even off-line functionality —Google docs being the prototypical example. Long gone are the days that web servers merely had to answer incoming HTTP requests with a block of static HTML. Today’s servers react to a continuous stream of events coming from JavaScript applications that have been pushed to clients. As a result, application logic and data is increasingly distributed. Traditional dichotomies such as “client vs. server” and “offline vs. online” are fading.
The ProWeb’22 workshop is a forum for researchers and practitioners to share and discuss new technology for programming these and future evolutions of the web. We welcome submissions introducing programming technology (i.e., frameworks, libraries, programming languages, program analyses and development tools) for implementing web applications and for maintaining their quality, as well as experience reports about their usage.
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
- Quality on the new web: static and dynamic program analyses, metrics, development tools, automated testing, contract systems, type systems, migration from legacy architectures, web service APIs, API conformance checking, …
- Designing for and hosting novel languages on the web: compilation to JavaScript, WebAssembly, …
- Multi-tier (or tierless) programming: frameworks for isomorphic applications, new languages and runtimes, tier splitting compilers, type systems, …
- Data sharing, replication and consistency: cloud types, CRDTs, eventual consistency, offline storage, peer-to-peer communication, …
- Security on the new web: security policies, policy enforcement, membranes, vulnerability detection, dynamic patching, …
- Surveys and case studies using state-of-the-art web technology (e.g., WebAssembly, WebSockets, Web Storage, Service Workers, Meteor, WebRTC, Angular.js, React and React Native, TypeScript, Proxies, ClojureScript, Amber Smalltalk, Scala.js …)
- Ideas on and experience reports about: how to reconcile the need for quality with the need for agility on the web, how to master and combine the myriad of tier-specific technologies required to develop a web application, …
- Position papers on what the future of the web will look like
Call for Papers
ProWeb 2022: 6th International Workshop on Programming Technology for the Future Web
https://2022.programming-conference.org/track/proweb-2022-papers
Co-located with the
CANCELLATION NOTICE: Unfortunately, ProWeb’22 has been cancelled this year. We will be back in 2023 for a new edition of ProWeb.
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Full-fledged web applications have become ubiquitous on desktop and mobile devices alike. Whereas “responsive” web applications already offered a more desktop-like experience, there is an increasing demand for “rich” web applications (RIAs) that offer collaborative and even off-line functionality: Google Docs being the prototypical example. Long gone are the days that web servers merely had to answer incoming HTTP requests with a block of static HTML. Today’s servers react to a continuous stream of events coming from JavaScript applications that have been pushed to clients. As a result, application logic and data are increasingly distributed and traditional dichotomies such as “client vs. server” and “offline vs. online” are fading.
Call for Contributions
The ProWeb22 workshop is a forum for researchers and practitioners to share and discuss new technology for programming these and future evolutions of the web. We welcome submissions introducing programming technology (i.e., frameworks, libraries, programming languages, program analyses, and development tools) and formalisms for implementing web applications and for maintaining their quality, as well as experience reports about their usage. Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
- Applications of AI to web software development: code models, code prediction, change impact analysis, automated testing
- Web App Quality: static and dynamic program analyses, metrics, development tools, automated testing, contract systems, type systems, migration from legacy architectures, web service APIs, API conformance checking
- Designing for and hosting novel languages on the web: compilation to JavaScript, WebAssembly
- Multi-tier (or tierless) programming: new languages and runtimes, tier-splitting compilers, type systems
- Principles and practice of Web UI programming: data binding, reactive programming, virtual DOM
- Data sharing, replication, and consistency: cloud types, CRDTs, eventual consistency, offline storage, peer-to-peer communication
- Security on the new web: security policies, policy enforcement, membranes, vulnerability detection, dynamic patching
- Surveys and case studies using state-of-the-art web technology (e.g., WebAssembly, WebSockets, Web Storage, Service Workers, WebRTC, Angular.js, React and React Native, TypeScript, Proxies, PureScript, ClojureScript, Amber Smalltalk, Scala.js)
- Ideas on and experience reports about: how to reconcile the need for quality with the need for agility on the web, how to master and combine the myriad of tier-specific technologies required to develop a web application
- Position papers on what the future of the web will look like
This year, we are accepting three types of submission:
- Full papers, position papers, and experience reports: 6-page papers describing novel research, which, when accepted, will be included in the ACM Digital Library.
- Demo papers: 4-page papers illustrating demonstrations of tools and prototypes.
- Presentation abstracts: 2-page extended abstracts.
Presentation abstracts and demo papers will not be included in the ACM Digital Library but will be included in an informal pre-proceedings on the website. We very much welcome presentation abstracts about work already published elsewhere, or giving an overview of an existing system, and the format is designed not to preclude future publication.
Submissions should be in ACM SIGPLAN two-column format (see https://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/). References are not counted in the page limits.
If you have any questions or wonder whether your submission is in scope, please do not hesitate to contact the organizers.
More information: https://2022.programming-conference.org/track/proweb-2022-papers
Important dates (AoE)
- Submission deadline: 1st February 2021
- Author notification: 1st March 2021
- Camera-ready version: 1st May 2021
Formatting instructions
The format of your paper must strictly adhere to the ACM Format. LaTeX: Use version acmart v1.77 or newer. You can directly download the LaTeX class file acmart and the BibTeX ACM Reference Format, which are also available from CTAN. Please use the ‘sigconf’ style by using the following LaTeX class configuration: \documentclass[sigconf,screen]{acmart} Word: Download template from ACM format site. Please use the ‘sigconf’ style by selecting the right template.