Human Aspects of Types and Reasoning AssistantsHATRA 2021
Programming language designers seek to provide strong tools to help developers reason about their programs. For example, the formal methods community seeks to enable developers to prove correctness properties of their code, and type system designers seek to exclude classes of undesirable behavior from programs. The security community creates tools to help developers achieve their security goals. In order to make these approaches as effective as possible for developers, recent work has integrated approaches from human-computer interaction research into programming language design. This workshop brings together programming languages, software engineering, security, and human-computer interaction researchers to investigate methods for making languages that provide stronger safety properties more effective for programmers and software engineers.
We have two goals: (1) to provide a venue for discussion and feedback on early-stage approaches that might enable people to be more effective at achieving stronger safety properties in their programs; (2) to facilitate discussion about relevant topics of participant interest.
HATRA is interested in two different kinds of contributions. First, extended abstracts that summarize an existing body of work that is relevant to the workshop’s topic; the presentations serve to familiarize the community, which may be diverse, with work that already exists. Second, research papers that describe a new idea, approach, or hypothesis in the space, and are presented as an opportunity for the authors to receive community feedback and for the community to seek inspiration from others.
The day will be divided into two segments. In the first segment, authors of accepted papers will present their work. In the second segment, we will conduct an “unconference”-style meeting. By allowing the participants to drive the agenda, we hope to focus on topics that provide stimulating and enlightening discussion.
Tue 19 OctDisplayed time zone: Central Time (US & Canada) change
10:50 - 12:10 | |||
10:50 15mTalk | Human Aspects of SASyLF, an Educational Proof Assistant for Type Theory HATRA Jonathan Aldrich Carnegie Mellon University Pre-print | ||
11:05 15mTalk | An Empirical Study of Protocols in Smart Contracts HATRA Timothy Mou Swarthmore College, Michael Coblenz University of Maryland at College Park, Jonathan Aldrich Carnegie Mellon University Link to publication | ||
11:20 15mTalk | Position Paper: Goals of the Luau Type System HATRA Link to publication | ||
11:35 15mTalk | User-driven design and evaluation of Liquid Types in Java HATRA Catarina Gamboa LASIGE, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Paulo Canelas LASIGE, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Christopher Steven Timperley Carnegie Mellon University, Alcides Fonseca LASIGE, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa Pre-print | ||
11:50 20mMeeting | Paper discussion, session 1 HATRA |
13:50 - 15:10 | |||
13:50 15mTalk | Toward a Theory of Programming Language and Reasoning Assistant Design: Minimizing Cognitive Load HATRA Michael Coblenz University of Maryland at College Park Link to publication | ||
14:05 15mTalk | Towards an Incremental Dataset of Proofs HATRA Hanneli Tavante McGill University Pre-print | ||
14:20 15mTalk | Toward Hole-Driven Development with Liquid Haskell HATRA Patrick Redmond University of California at Santa Cruz, Gan Shen University of California, Santa Cruz, USA, Lindsey Kuper University of California at Santa Cruz Link to publication | ||
14:35 15mTalk | Toward SMT-Based Refinement Types in Agda HATRA Gan Shen University of California, Santa Cruz, USA, Lindsey Kuper University of California at Santa Cruz Link to publication | ||
14:50 20mTalk | Paper discussion, session 2 HATRA |
15:40 - 17:00 | Novel Interfaces and DiscussionHATRA at Zurich E Chair(s): Jonathan Aldrich Carnegie Mellon University First, authors will present two papers, and we will have 10 minutes to discuss them. Then, we will use the remaining 40 minutes for group discussion of promising research directions. | ||
15:40 15mTalk | Typed Image-based Programming with Structure Editing HATRA Link to publication | ||
15:55 15mTalk | A New Medium for Communicating Research on Programming Languages HATRA Will Crichton Stanford University Pre-print | ||
16:10 10mTalk | Paper discussion, session 3 HATRA | ||
16:20 40mMeeting | General discussion HATRA |
Accepted Papers
Call for Papers
HATRA welcomes two kinds of submissions:
- Extended abstracts summarizing existing published work that would be of interest to the community.
- Research proposals, position papers, and early-stage result papers. These come in short (up to four pages plus unlimited references) and long (up to eight pages plus unlimited references) varieties. These may describe hypotheses, ideas for research, or early-stage results. The objective is to provide an opportunity for the authors to receive feedback from the community as well as to help inspire participants to identify and clarify their own research directions. To encourage submission of ideas that may be published in other venues in the future, papers will not be published in the ACM Digital Library.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Type system design
- Programming language evaluation
- Programming language and tool design methodology
- Interactive theorem provers
- Lightweight specification tools
- Proof engineering
- Psychology of programming
HATRA will use a review process that is optionally double-blind. Ideally, authors should omit identifying information from their papers, and should reference their own related work in the third person. However, if this is impractical, perhaps because you are submitting an extended abstract, you may include author information in your submission.
Extended abstracts may be in either one-page “sigconf” format or two-page “ACM Small” format. Other submissions should be in “ACM Small” style. Papers should be submitted using HotCRP by August 6, 2021: https://hatra21.hotcrp.com